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University of Strasbourg
THE POLITICS OF KNOWLEDGE:ASSESSING AND COMMUNICATING RISK
General course descriptionPublic concerns about some of the latest scientific and technological developments, such as genetically modified food, human cloning, environmental degradation, more reliable prediction of natural hazards, etc., reflect a new relation between science and its publics. As science and technology encroaches into nearly every part of our working environment as well as our private lives, we are increasingly asked - not only as individuals but also as social groups - to take decisions that are linked to at least some understanding of scientific and technological knowledge. This specialisation will examine the emergence and the understanding of the notion of risk in our society, ask who assesses risk and with what authority (granted by whom?). Investigating these issues will allow students to trace an ever-evolving and changing politics of knowledge that we shape to a large extent through our political, scientific, social and cultural choices. List of core literatureBeck, Ulrich. Risk society: towards of new modernity (London: Sage, 1992). Daston, Lorraine, "Objectivity and the escape from perspective", Social Studies of Science, 22 (1992) 597-618. Fogel, Cathleen, "The Local, the Global, and the Kyoto Protocol", in:
Jasanoff, Sheila and Marybeth Long Martello (eds),
Earthly Politics: local and global
in environmental governance (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2004), pp.
103-125. Gigerenzer, Gerd. Reckoning with risk: learning to live with uncertainty
(London: Allen Lane, 2002), pp. 115-140 (chapter 7: "Aids counseling") Irwin, Alan & Wynne, Brian, (eds), Misunderstanding Science ? The Public
Reconstruction of Science and Technology, (Cambridge : Cambridge
University Press, 1996) Jasanoff, Sheila, "Image and imagination: The formation of global
environmental consciousness", in: Clark A. Miller and Paul N. Edwards (eds.),
Changing the atmosphere: Expert knowledge and environmental governance
(Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2001), pp. 309-337. Miller Clark A. and Paul N. Edwards (eds.), Changing the atmosphere:
Expert knowledge and environ mental governance (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT
Press, 2001). Miller, David, "Risk, science and policy: definitional struggles,
information management, the media and BSE" Social Science & Medicine 49
(1999) 1239-1255. Miller, Steve & Gregory, Jane, Science in Public : Communication,
Culture and Credibility, (New York : Plenum Press, 1998). Nelkin Dorothy, Selling Science. How the Press Covers Science and
Technology (New York : Freeman & Compagny, 1995) Renn, Ortwin. "Concepts of risk: a classification", in: Sheldon Krimsky,
Dominic Golding (eds.), Social theories of risk (Westport: Praeger,
1992), pp. 53- 79. Schneider, Stephen H. et al. (eds), Climate Change Policy (Washington:
Island Press, 2002). Shapin, Steven, 'Rarely Pure and Never Simple: Talking about Truth'
Configurations 7.1 (1999) 1-14 Slovic, Paul. The perception of risk (London: Earthscan, 2000). Weingart, Peter, Anita Engels, and Petra Pansegrau, "Risks of
communication: discourses on climate change in science, politics, and
the mass media", Public Understanding of Science 9 (2000), pp. 261-283. Language of instructionEnglish Minimum and maximum number of students3-10 Example of thesis topics Transboundary River management: An Assessment of International
Cooperation on the Risk of Flooding along the River Meuse (Marit
Heideman) Differing Views of Uncertainty in Environmental Controversies: The Kearl
Oils Sands Case, 2003- Risk Society as a Risk for Developing Countries: The Case of Italian
Toxic Waste Dumped on the Black Sea (Ozgur Cengiz)
Nanotechnology in context: Science, non-governmental organisations and
the challenge of communication (Janina Schirmer)
Establishing Product Safety in Europe: The Case of the Genetically
Modified Potato Amflora (Elisabeth Mueller)
Should uncertainty trigger the precautionary principle? The controversy
on drilling for gas in the Dutch Wadden Sea (1998-1999) (Bart van Oost)
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