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This article discusses how science centers and museums address controversial issues in science and technology. It explores the factors that facilitate dialogue, collecting visitors' opinions, and the role of public controversy in science and society. It also examines the different types of controversies and the importance of creating a neutral and informative environment in science centers and museums.
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Controversialissues in S&Tenter Science Centresand Museum Guglielmo Maglio – Fondazione IDIS Erice International SchoolofJournalism 02/08/12
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Guglielmo Maglio – Fondazione IDIS Erice International SchoolofJournalism 02/08/12
Controversialissues in S&Tenter Science Centres and Museum summary: Whatiscontroversial? Howmuseums deal withcontroversialissues? Factorshelpingdialogue Some experiences Collectingvisitors’ opinions Controversial in Nano Consensus game
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum controversy - defining its meaning “An idea or a viewpoint may be considered an issue if a number of people disagree about the statements and assertions made… Issues that deeply divide a society, that generate conflicting explanations and solution based on alternative value systems are considered controversial” (Robert Stradling 1984, Controversial Issues in Classroom) 'In general, a controversy is not a dispute involving one person, nor one that is over rapidly. A controversy exists over a longer period of time and divides groups of people.' (Thomas Brante 1993, Controversial Science From Content to Contention)
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum controversy - defining its meaning A controversial issue discussion is also defined as a reflective dialogue among people about an issue on which there is a disagreement. Controversy provokes the dialogue pushing people to access a topic through their own opinion. But to stimulate dialogue we should provide: Supportive evidences (including destabilising knowledge), Comments and expressions of different points of view (experts included) An adequate space and time Good management of the dialogue
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum The public controversy over science and society is one of the most important ways of communication between the public and the experts Martin Bauer assertion that the public controversy over and resistance to new technology may function as unofficial technology assessment In interviews many scientists confess that due to the public controversy over and resistance to GMO they started to look over the potential adversarial effects of their research for the first time.
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Dialogue on controversialissues in S&T–Why? Policy decisions on S&T are seenby people aseitherrisk or safe Riskdecisions are betterwhen public shares the power People cannot express their opinion ifthey’re notinformed Explaining “risk” information isdifficultbutnotimpossible
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Are museums and science centres a placefordialogue? can popularizetechnicalcontents knowhowto create the “right” environment can beneutralarenas have the trust ofvisitors havecontactswithscientists/industries and stakeholders knowtheirvisitors
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum How science museums and centres deal withcontroversialissues on S&T? AccordingtoBrante (1993), there are twotypesof science controversy: ScientificFactControversy Primarilyconcernsdebateswhere the partieshavescientific status Science-basedControversy Debateswith a heavyethical, social, politicaloverlay
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum ScientificFactControversy Primarilyconcernsdebateswhere the partieshavescientific status The topicschosen can raise interest in visitors, buttheyusually play the roleof passive audience, sincetheyhavenot the knowledgeto join the debate Visitorsshouldbuildtheirknowledgefrom the experts and mediatorstheymeet. It’s a classical sample of Public Understandingof Science Some topicsmayevennot interest large public at all (ex: Neanderthals and Sapiens are just the samespecies?.. Do Higgs-Bosonsparticlesreallyexists?…)
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Science-basedControversy Debateswith a heavyethical, social, politicaloverlay Thesecontroversiesneeds the involvementofscientificexperts, butalsootherexpertswhohaveparity in knowledge (philosophers, social scientists, politicians). The understandingof science isnot the onlyknowledgethatvisitorsneedto join the debate. (ex.: nanotechnologies, Stemcellresearch, Brainsciences, Nuclear and alternative energies, GMO foods….)
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum A debate on controversialtopicsshould include: Issuesoftencentered on risk Issuesthat are “hot”, relevant and interestingfor the audience Ethicalissuesaffecting the visitor’sexperiences and feelings Moralissuesaffecting the visitor’ssenseof social consciousness Ifwe take in consideration the parametersabove, we can make a debatenotonlycontroversialforscientificistitution, butalsocontroversialfor the large public.
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum some human/physical factors helping debate according to the Città della Scienza experience
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Exhibition: Supportive evidences:
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Exhibition: collecting opinions
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Exhibition: providing stimulating space
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum human: Supportive evidences
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum human:stimulating opinions
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum human: management of the dialogue
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Whenvisitorshavetheirsay!
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Whenvisitorshavetheirsay!
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Talking Nano!
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Talking Nano! Three MisconceptionsaboutEmergingNanotechnologies Itistoosoontotellwhat the social and ethicalissues are. (ex: unequalaccesstotechnology) The nanotechnologyrevolutionisinevitablygood. (ex: differencebetweenindustralizednations, sustainability) The pointof the social and ethicalissuesistosecure public acceptance. (ex: oppositionisnotalways the resultofmisunderstanding)
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Social and EthicalIssuesaboutNanotechnologies Social contextIssues ContestedMoralIssues TechnocultureIssues Formof life Issues TransformationalIssues Source: Ronald Sandler, 2009. Nanotechnology: the Social and EthicalIssues.
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Social contextIssuesaboutNanotechnologies •differentialaccesstomedical care andmedicaltechnologies; • educational inequalities; •inadequate information security/privacy protections; •inefficiencies in intellectualpropertysystems; •inadequateindividualautonomyprotections; •under-representationof women and minoritygroups in engineering and academia; •unsustainableagriculturalpolicies and practices; •unfairtariffs, subsidies and tradeagreements; •inadequate consumer safetyprotection; •conflictsofinterestsforregulators or researchers; •externalizationofpollution and healthcosts; •inadequatebiodefense/militaryresearchoversight; and •inadequategovernmentalcapacity (e.g., resources, expertise, commitment, institutional design, legal authority, public trust, communication, accessto information).
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology ContestedMoralIssuesaboutNanotechnologies •biological and chemicalweapons; •humanembryonicstemcellresearch (and associatedtherapeutics); •humanenhancement; and • gene patenting and bio-prospecting.
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology TechnocultureIssuesaboutNanotechnologies •tendencyto favor technologicalfixesovercomprehensivesolutions; •tendencytotreatproblematiceffectsratherthanaddresstheirunderlyingcauses; •techno-hubris, or overestimationofourabilitytopredict and controltechnology (particularlywithincomplexsystems); •techno-determinism, or overstatementof the extenttowhichtechnologydriveshistory; •techno-optimism, or overconfidence in the inevitablegoodnessoftechnology and itscapacityto solve social and environmentalproblems; •alienationfromnature—i.e., detrimentaltechnologicalmediationofinteractions and relationshipsbetween people and nature; •commodificationof nature and marginalizationofnon-economicvalues; and •privilegingelite-controlledriskassessment (ratherthan inclusive or precautionary approaches) todeterminingresponsivenesstouncertaintiesassociatedwithtechnology.
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology TransformationalIssuesaboutNanotechnologies •For the personundergoinganenhancement, what are the risksassociatedwith the process? •Woulditbebeneficial or detrimentaltobecomeradicallyenhanced? •Istheresomethingproblematicabout the desiretobecomeradicallyenhanced? •Shouldparentshave the legal right toradicallyenhancetheirchildren? •Isitmorallypermissibleforparentstoradicallyenhancetheirchildren (and, if so, shouldthey do so)? •Shouldparentseverberequiredtoradicallyenhancetheirchildren? •Howwouldradicalhumanenhancementaffectobtainingfamilialrelationships, institutions and norms? •Howwouldradicalhumanenhancement impact obtaining social norms, practices, organizations and institutionsbeyond the family? •Overall, wouldwidespreadradicalhumanenhancementhavegood or bad social consequences? •Wouldradicalhumanenhancementimpair or promotejustice? •Howwouldradicalhumanenhancement alter ourrelationshipto the environment and non-humanorganisms?
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Howto introduce topics Tell visitors what they should know Make visitors understand (or having the perception that they can understand) Prepare visitors to what you are not telling them Help them to express their opinion
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Hot-topics in Science centres Nanotechnology Stem cell research Brainsciences Nuclear and alternative energies GMO foods
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology What we should know before We can’t give visitors “scary” information without scarying them When we communicate risk there is always an emotional component Reaction of visitors can be emotional and rational at the same time That there are risk-communication professionals who can help That people can find their preferred information sources (not always the more reliable ones) That not all the scientists know how to communicate
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology Sharing the power • When visitors are informed and able to decide, they • don’t feel excluded • understand things better • can evaluate (and eventually tolerate) risk much better
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum Decide game
Controversial issues in S&T enter Science Centres and Museum time for your questions…. Thank you! Guglielmo Maglio maglio@cittadellascienza.it
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology
Science centres and public debates: involving the public in decisions on science and technology