i3WP_15-CSI-02.pdfScience policy has become a consequence as much as an engine of European integration. This paper argues that European construction is a process whereby science and democracy are jointly problematized as matters of progress and perfectibility. In turn, framing science and democracy as matters of progress participates in the making of Europe as a political, economic and moral entity worthy of public support. This paper identifies three operations that make science a problem of both technological and democratic progress, namely the construction of nanotechnology as an “experiment” for the connections between science and European publics, the writing of the GMO controversy as a narrative of “failure” of science/society relatio...
For decades the idea that scientists, policy makers and industry know best in research and innovatio...
For decades the idea that scientists, policy makers and industry know best in research and innovatio...
Küppers G, Roth J. Democratising European Science and Technology Policies? On users, problems and th...
i3WP_15-CSI-02.pdfScience policy has become a consequence as much as an engine of European integrati...
i3WP_15-CSI-02.pdfScience policy has become a consequence as much as an engine of European integrati...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
Abstract European decision-making on techno-scientific issues has encountered public suspicion and l...
Amid a wider debate over the European Union’s democratic deficit, ‘science and governance’ has attra...
An examination of nanotechnology as a lens through which to study contemporary democracy in both the...
The European Union is often seen as a faceless bureaucracy lacking meaningful collective goals, and ...
The European Union is often seen as a faceless bureaucracy lacking meaningful collective goals, and ...
The European Union is often seen as a faceless bureaucracy lacking meaningful collective goals, and ...
For decades the idea that scientists, policy makers and industry know best in research and innovatio...
For decades the idea that scientists, policy makers and industry know best in research and innovatio...
Küppers G, Roth J. Democratising European Science and Technology Policies? On users, problems and th...
i3WP_15-CSI-02.pdfScience policy has become a consequence as much as an engine of European integrati...
i3WP_15-CSI-02.pdfScience policy has become a consequence as much as an engine of European integrati...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
International audienceThe European Union is the outcome of a process that is still very much in deve...
Abstract European decision-making on techno-scientific issues has encountered public suspicion and l...
Amid a wider debate over the European Union’s democratic deficit, ‘science and governance’ has attra...
An examination of nanotechnology as a lens through which to study contemporary democracy in both the...
The European Union is often seen as a faceless bureaucracy lacking meaningful collective goals, and ...
The European Union is often seen as a faceless bureaucracy lacking meaningful collective goals, and ...
The European Union is often seen as a faceless bureaucracy lacking meaningful collective goals, and ...
For decades the idea that scientists, policy makers and industry know best in research and innovatio...
For decades the idea that scientists, policy makers and industry know best in research and innovatio...
Küppers G, Roth J. Democratising European Science and Technology Policies? On users, problems and th...