When the work and reputation of scientists suffer ritual degradation, a range of tactics can be deployed to resist and rework the psychological and social impacts. Five key resistance tactics to degradation in science are revealing degradation rituals, redeeming the reputation of the targeted scientist, reframing the degradation as unfair, redirecting attention to other domains, and refusing to cooperate with the rituals. These tactics are illustrated through three case studies of scientists targeted for conducting research threatening to the interests of powerful groups
‘‘Undone science’ ’ refers to areas of research that are left unfunded, incomplete, or generally ign...
Manifold political interventions, such as resource cutbacks, political regulation and societal instr...
Resistance used to mean irrational and reactionary behaviour, assuming that rationality resides on t...
Reputations are crucially important to scientists, so it is valuable to examine processes by which r...
Scientists whose work and reputation come under fire may adopt strategic practices to protect and re...
Strategies for dissenting scientists Those who challenge conventional views or vested interests in s...
Some of the problems scientists encounter in making their feedback of research findings relevant and...
Supporters of dominant scientific theories sometimes attack competing, less favoured theories in way...
<p>This paper will suggest the use of the Social Harm Approach (Hillyard, Pantazis, Tobs & Gordo...
Pressures on epidemiologists, toxicologists, and on public health scientists to suppress their work ...
The distribution of credit, resources and opportunities in science is heavily skewed due to unjust p...
When scientists engage in public advocacy, or indeed in any public comment on controversial issues, ...
The scientific and technological knowledge are unable to form part of our popular culture. Important...
Threats and attacks on researchers can lead them to self-isolate and retreat from public communicati...
Many people fear that science and technology are encroaching on domains of life in a way that underm...
‘‘Undone science’ ’ refers to areas of research that are left unfunded, incomplete, or generally ign...
Manifold political interventions, such as resource cutbacks, political regulation and societal instr...
Resistance used to mean irrational and reactionary behaviour, assuming that rationality resides on t...
Reputations are crucially important to scientists, so it is valuable to examine processes by which r...
Scientists whose work and reputation come under fire may adopt strategic practices to protect and re...
Strategies for dissenting scientists Those who challenge conventional views or vested interests in s...
Some of the problems scientists encounter in making their feedback of research findings relevant and...
Supporters of dominant scientific theories sometimes attack competing, less favoured theories in way...
<p>This paper will suggest the use of the Social Harm Approach (Hillyard, Pantazis, Tobs & Gordo...
Pressures on epidemiologists, toxicologists, and on public health scientists to suppress their work ...
The distribution of credit, resources and opportunities in science is heavily skewed due to unjust p...
When scientists engage in public advocacy, or indeed in any public comment on controversial issues, ...
The scientific and technological knowledge are unable to form part of our popular culture. Important...
Threats and attacks on researchers can lead them to self-isolate and retreat from public communicati...
Many people fear that science and technology are encroaching on domains of life in a way that underm...
‘‘Undone science’ ’ refers to areas of research that are left unfunded, incomplete, or generally ign...
Manifold political interventions, such as resource cutbacks, political regulation and societal instr...
Resistance used to mean irrational and reactionary behaviour, assuming that rationality resides on t...