Over the past 10 years, numerous public debates on new and emerging science and technologies have taken place in the United Kingdom. In this article, we characterise the discourses emerging from these debates and compare them to the discourses in analogous expert scientific and policy reports. We find that while the public is broadly supportive of new scientific developments, they see the risks and social and ethical issues associated with them as unpredictable but inherent parts of the developments. In contrast, the scientific experts and policymakers see risks and social and ethical issues as manageable and quantifiable with more research and knowledge. We argue that these differences amount to two different sociotechnical imaginaries or ...
Every new advance in science and in technology, every evolution in society, politics and culture bri...
How do we mean ‘democratic’ and ‘dialogic’ when referring to something supposedly universal such as ...
This introductory essay looks back on the two decades since the journal Public Understanding of Scie...
This paper examines the way in which innovation in science policy in the UK over the last 25 years h...
While theoretical work and empirical research have examined science policyinforming “dialogue events...
In this paper I engage with debates on technoscientific governance, narrative, and emergent public a...
The field of public participation in issues relating to science, technology and the environment is b...
In this paper I engage with debates on technoscientific governance, narrative, and emergent public a...
According to Alan Irwin, the 'new scientific governance' in the UK imagines beneficial technological...
In politics many things depend on how an issue is framed from different points of view, including sc...
The discourse of public engagement with the sciences is based on the oft-cited premise that publics ...
How should we understand ‘the public’ in public dialogue given the dominant assumption within policy...
128-146The social construction of emerging science and technology systems requires extensive dialogu...
This paper explores the relationship between science and public discourse as an issue of interdiscip...
How do we mean ‘democratic’ and ‘dialogic’ when referring to something supposedly universal such as ...
Every new advance in science and in technology, every evolution in society, politics and culture bri...
How do we mean ‘democratic’ and ‘dialogic’ when referring to something supposedly universal such as ...
This introductory essay looks back on the two decades since the journal Public Understanding of Scie...
This paper examines the way in which innovation in science policy in the UK over the last 25 years h...
While theoretical work and empirical research have examined science policyinforming “dialogue events...
In this paper I engage with debates on technoscientific governance, narrative, and emergent public a...
The field of public participation in issues relating to science, technology and the environment is b...
In this paper I engage with debates on technoscientific governance, narrative, and emergent public a...
According to Alan Irwin, the 'new scientific governance' in the UK imagines beneficial technological...
In politics many things depend on how an issue is framed from different points of view, including sc...
The discourse of public engagement with the sciences is based on the oft-cited premise that publics ...
How should we understand ‘the public’ in public dialogue given the dominant assumption within policy...
128-146The social construction of emerging science and technology systems requires extensive dialogu...
This paper explores the relationship between science and public discourse as an issue of interdiscip...
How do we mean ‘democratic’ and ‘dialogic’ when referring to something supposedly universal such as ...
Every new advance in science and in technology, every evolution in society, politics and culture bri...
How do we mean ‘democratic’ and ‘dialogic’ when referring to something supposedly universal such as ...
This introductory essay looks back on the two decades since the journal Public Understanding of Scie...