Mapping knowledge controversies: science, democracy and the redistribution of expertise
Top Cited Papers
- 28 July 2009
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by SAGE Publications in Progress in Human Geography
- Vol. 33 (5) , 587-598
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132509339841
Abstract
Reflecting on conversations between geography and science and technology studies (STS) over the last 15 years or so, this paper addresses their shared interest in knowledge controversies as generative political events. It explores how such events give rise to new ways of practising relations between science and democracy focusing on the case of environmental knowledge claims and technologies. This exploration interrogates three mobilizations of environmental knowledge controversies that have different implications for redistributing expertise, including that of (social) scientists, in the composition of knowledge polities. The first version sets out to map the language commitments of contributors to a controversy with the aim of enabling interested citizens to trace the ‘partisanship’ of scientific knowledge claims. The second is also a cartographic exercise designed to teach students how to account for the political force of technoscientific controversies by mapping the intense entanglements of scientific knowledge claims with legal, moral, economic and social concerns on the web. The third is concerned less with mapping knowledge controversies from an analytical distance than with an experimental research methodology that sets out to intervene in extant controversies in ways that map researchers’ own knowledge claims into what is at stake.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Logics of interdisciplinarityEconomy and Society, 2008
- Reflexive Interdisciplinary Research: The Making of a Research Programme on the Rural Economy and Land UseJournal of Agricultural Economics, 2006
- Living cities: Towards a politics of convivialityScience as Culture, 2006
- Mapping deliberation: calculation, articulation and intervention in the politics of organ transplantationEconomy and Society, 2006
- Deleuze and Guattari's Last Enigmatic MessageAngelaki, 2005
- Why Has Critique Run out of Steam? From Matters of Fact to Matters of ConcernCritical Inquiry, 2004
- Metabolising Risk: Food Scares and the Un/Re-Making of Belgian BeefEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2003
- Generating MaterialsPublished by SAGE Publications ,2003
- Is Science a Public Good? Fifth Mullins Lecture, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 23 March 1993Science, Technology, & Human Values, 1994
- Exploring Environmental Values through the Medium of Small Groups: 1. Theory and PracticeEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1988