Representing Biotechnology: An Ethnography of Quebec Science Policy
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Social Studies of Science
- Vol. 20 (2) , 195-227
- https://doi.org/10.1177/030631290020002001
Abstract
In recent years, the sociology of science has been profoundly renewed by the use of an ethnographic approach to the study of scientific practice. The same cannot be said of science policy studies. Only a limited number of authors have studied in detail the construction and application of particular science policy programmes, and their contributions are mostly based on the a posteriori examination of public documents. In this paper, we resort to an ethnographic approach in order to study how the science and technology staff of the Quebec Government, starting in 1981, went about devising policy measures as part of what they saw as a general science policy framework for biotechnology. Science policy practices, at least at that stage, appear to be first and foremost representational practices grounded in particular kinds of literary activities characterized by an extended intertextual web. In such a framework, the native category of file or dossier plays a central role, allowing for the basic classificatory operations in which representations are grounded.Keywords
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