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Контроверзы - искоренимое зло или неизбежное благо? Динамика отношений науки и общества в перспективе социального конструктивизма и акторно-сетевой теории
Are Public Controversies an Eradicable Evil or an Inevitable Good? Exploring the Dynamics of the Science-society Relationship from a Social Constructivist and Actor-network Perspective
[journal article]
Abstract The last half century has brought great changes to the science-society relationship. Unconditional acceptance of scientific expertise has been replaced by challenges to scientific authority and public socio-technical controversies. Social researchers have made efforts to understand the tensions in s... view more
The last half century has brought great changes to the science-society relationship. Unconditional acceptance of scientific expertise has been replaced by challenges to scientific authority and public socio-technical controversies. Social researchers have made efforts to understand the tensions in science and society relationship, trying find ways to resolve them. These efforts have broadly contributed to transformations in science and technology policy that got underway at the turn of the 20th-21st centuries. However, controversies have not faded into the past. In this article, the author provides a comparative analysis of the explanations of the above-mentioned dynamics of the science-society relationship in social constructivism and actor-network theory. The explanation of social constructivism is the most accredited perspective in Public Engagement with Science (PES) and science communication studies. It considers the dynamics of the science-society relationship by appealing to the local social identities of heterogeneous publics and their expertise, opposed to institutionalized assumptions of science. This perspective formed the basis of the dialogue model which is the primary reference point for modern science communication. In contrast, the explanation provided by actor-network theory, which highlights a deepening crisis of the division between specialists and non-specialists, remains, rather, on the periphery of scholarly attention. To introduce the approaches, the author refers to the key works of Michel Callon and Brian Wynne. The comparison is arranged around three main lines: 1) what are the reasons for challenging scientific authority and the emergence of public controversies; 2) how science and technology policy should be built; 3) what role social scientists play in the dynamics of the science-society relationship. By contrasting the arguments of the two approaches, it is demonstrated that scholarly disregard of actor-network theory in PES and science communication studies is unmerited, as it has potential for addressing and resolving the major issues in these domains.... view less
Keywords
actor-network-theory; science
Classification
Sociology of Science, Sociology of Technology, Research on Science and Technology
Free Keywords
science communication; public engagement with science; social constructivism; public understanding of science; public controversies
Document language
Russian
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 8-56
Journal
Sociologija vlasti / Sociology of power, 35 (2023) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.22394/2074-0492-2003-3-8-56
ISSN
2074-0492
Status
Published Version; reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0