1st Edition

Interfaces between Science and Society

    The project of science has been to provide answers to questions about the world and how it works. Often, this lofty role has been characterised by a narrow and dogmatic scientific training, an unwillingness to communicate to differing stakeholder needs, a refusal to accept and to manage uncertainty, complexity and value commitments, and the reduction of knowledge assessment to colleague peer review on narrowly technical issues. Times have changed. As the world faces increasingly disparate challenges, science is subjected to increasingly vehement demands from a society calling for transparency, openness and public participation in science policy. Science is going through an evolutionary process. Perhaps the most painful process it has ever encountered. 

    Research on the interfaces between science and society is a burgeoning area. A new conception of knowledge now appears to be emerging, based on the awareness of complexity, uncertainty and a plurality of legitimate perspectives and interests. Democracy is extending into the previously quite exclusive scientific realm, and science must now submit to public scrutiny and participation in the governance of knowledge. This book provides much-needed reflections on the methods and tools for knowledge quality assurance, particularly on its inputs to extended policy and decision-making processes. 

    The overall aim is to improve the relationship between science and society. The discussion involves six themes: communicating between plural perspectives; accepting and learning how to manage uncertainty, complexity and value commitments; acknowledging new conceptions of knowledge; implementing transparency, openness and participation in science policy; valuing community-based research; and exploring how new ICT can support inclusive governance. Taken together, these themes provide both a framework and vision on how to conceive, discuss and evaluate the changes that are occurring. The chapters cover theory, practice, approaches, experiences, ideas and suggestions for a move beyond "talking the talk" to "walking the walk". 

    Science and policy interfaces are dynamic processes needing to permanently redefine themselves and their roles. This book contributes to the enrichment and deepening of our understanding of these important new trends in the social relations of science, which are fundamental to our understanding of the prospects for further progress. 

    The book will be essential reading for scientists, policy-makers, managers and the public.

    Introduction Sofia Guedes Vaz and Ângela Guimarães Pereira  1. When communication fails: A study of failures of global systems Jerome Ravetz  2. Science for sustainable development: Articulating knowledges Gilberto Gallopín and Hebe Vessuri  3. Reflexively dealing with uncertainty and complexity in policy-related knowledge: What can it mean? Matthieu Craye  4. Uncertainty, assumptions and value commitments in the knowledge base of complex environmental problems Jeroen Van der Sluijs  5. Science for governance: The implications of the complexity revolution Mario Giampietro, Tim Allen and Kozo Mayumi  6. Reflexivity and modesty in the application of complexity theory Roger Strand and Sílvia Cañellas-Boltà  7. Precaution as an invigorating context for scientific input in policy processes Cato C. ten Hallers-Tjabbes, David Gee and Sofia Guedes Vaz  8. Why knowledge assessment? Silvio Funtowicz  9. Deliberating foresight knowledge for policy and foresight knowledge assessment René Von Schomberg, Ângela Guimarães Pereira and Silvio Funtowicz  10. Transparency, openness and participation in science policy processes Maria Eduarda Gonçalves  11. Interfaces between science and policy for environmental governance: Lessons and open questions from the European Platform for Biodiversity Research Strategy Sybille van den Hove and Martin Sharman  12. Patents at the interfaces among science, society and the law Emanuela Gambini  13. Evaluating public and stakeholder engagement strategies in environmental governance Jacquelin Burgess and Judy Clark  14. Community-based research Jennifer A. Bellamy  15. Science and society in place-based communities: Uncomfortable partners David Waltner-Toews, Ligia Noronha and Dean Bavington  16. Science shops as science–society interfaces Henk A.J. Mulder, Michael S. Jørgensen, Laura Pricope, Norbert Steinhaus and Anke Valentin  17. Building knowledge partnerships with ICT? Social and technological conditions of conviviality Martin O'Connor  18. CSLoTs: communication of science to non-scientific audiences. VGAS©: Exploration of energy, lifestyles and climate Tiago de Sousa Pedrosa and Ângela Guimarães Pereira  19. Worldwide virtual network of practitioners working on science and society issues Mercè Agüera Cabo and Ângela Guimarães Pereira

    Biography

    Ângela Guimarães Pereira, Sofia Guedes Vaz, Sylvia Tognetti