Osallistu työryhmään ‘Science, Technology and Society’ Sosiologipäivillä 2018!

Westermarck-seuran vuosittaiset Sosiologipäivät ovat jälleen käsillä. Kuluvana vuonna Itä-Suomen Yliopisto järjestää konferenssin Joensuun kampuksella 15.-16.3.

Viime vuoden tapaan STS Helsinki organisoi päiville työryhmän, jonka tavoitteena on yhdistää tieteen ja teknologian tutkijoita niin Suomesta kuin ulkomailtakin.

Kaksipäiväinen työryhmä “science, technology and society” sisältää kiinnostavia esityksiä, jotka saavat varmasti aikaan hyvää keskustelua.

Aikataulu:

Torstai 15.3. klo 15.45-18.15 Natura N101

  1. Jose Canada: More-than-human intersectionality: understanding categorization, indentification and boundary-making during pandemic processes
  2. Salla Sariola & Elina Oinas: Living-with microbes in the era of antimicrobial resistance
  3. Venla Oikkonen: Pandemic vaccination, vaccine harm and the politics of futurity
  4. Mikko Hyyryläinen: Kulttuurin ja kognition sosiologia – mielen sosiologiaa vai kognitiivista sosiologiaa?
  5. Johanna Hokka: Sociology, Science Policy Ideals on ’Excellence’ and the symbolic struggles over legitimate science – Finnish and Swedish Sociology as a case in point

Perjantai 16.3. klo 9.00-11.30 Natura N104

  1. Vera Raivola: Making sense of a blood bank biobank
  2. Annerose Böhrer: Metaphors in organ transplantation and the role of donor cards
  3. Mikko Jauho: Structuring the Cardiovascular Health Arena – the Double Risk Object of Dietary Fat and Cholesterol
  4. Riikka Homanen: Hetero- ja parinormitonta sukulaisuutta tekemässä? Itselliset naiset ja naisparit yksityisissä hedelmöityshoidoissa
  5. Karolina Snell & Heta Tarkkala: Goldmining Nordic population(s) – data, health and policy

Työryhmän koordinaattorit ovat Heta Tarkkala, Itä Suomen Yliopisto/Helsingin Yliopisto, (heta.tarkkala@uef.fi), Karoliina Snell, Helsingin Yliopisto (karoliina.snell@helsinki.fi), ja Vera Raivola, Itä-Suomen Yliopisto/Helsingin Yliopisto (vera.raivola@student.uef.fi).

Koordinattorit vastaavat kaikkiin työryhmää koskeviin kysymyksiin.

Tervetuloa!

Do not miss our Workshop ‘Science, Technology and Society’ at the upcoming Sociology Days!

Time has arrived for Sosiologipäivät 2018, the annual conference of The Westermarck Society. This year, the conference is organized at the University of Eastern Finland, in the Joensuu campus, on the 15th and the 16th of March. As last year, members of the STS Helsinki network organize a workshop that has as an objective to bring together researchers across Finland who have an interest in science and technology, as well as from other countries. This year we have a very exciting list of presentations, so consider coming even if you do not have one. As last year, we are hoping for very exciting conversations to take place.

Timetable:

Thursday 15.3; 15.45-18.15; room Natura N101

  1. Jose Cañada: More-than-human intersectionality: understanding categorization, indentification and boundary-making during pandemic processes
  2. Salla Sariola & Elina Oinas: Living-with microbes in the era of antimicrobial resistance
  3. Venla Oikkonen: Pandemic vaccination, vaccine harm and the politics of futurity
  4. Mikko Hyyryläinen: Kulttuurin ja kognition sosiologia – mielen sosiologiaa vai kognitiivista sosiologiaa?
  5. Johanna Hokka: Sociology, Science Policy Ideals on ’Excellence’ and the symbolic struggles over legitimate science – Finnish and Swedish Sociology as a case in point

Friday 16.3; 9.00-11.30; room Natura N104

  1. Vera Raivola: Making sense of a blood bank biobank
  2. Annerose Böhrer: Metaphors in organ transplantation and the role of donor cards
  3. Mikko Jauho: Structuring the Cardiovascular Health Arena – the Double Risk Object of Dietary Fat and Cholesterol
  4. Riikka Homanen: Hetero- ja parinormitonta sukulaisuutta tekemässä? Itselliset naiset ja naisparit yksityisissä hedelmöityshoidoissa
  5. Karolina Snell & Heta Tarkkala: Goldmining Nordic population(s) – data, health and policy

The workshop has been organized and will be chaired by Heta Tarkkala, University of Eastern Finland/University of Helsinki (heta.tarkkala@uef.fi), Karoliina Snell, University of Helsinki (karoliina.snell@helsinki.fi), and Vera Raivola University of Eastern Finland (vera.raivola@student.uef.fi). Please get in touch with them if you have any questions about the session.

Annual STS symposium, University of Tampere, 14-15 June – propose a session!

The annual STS symposium of the The Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies will be held first time at the University of Tampere, 14-15 June, under the topic: Ideals and practice of interdisciplinary research.

We welcome presentations and sessions that explore different areas of interdisciplinary research from everyday academic challenges to philosophical considerations of conducting interdisciplinary research.

Keynote speakers:

Jane Calvert, University of Edinburgh, http://www.stis.ed.ac.uk/people/academic_staff/calvert_jane

Caterina Marchionni, University of Helsinki, https://sites.google.com/site/caterinamarchionni/home

Jaana Parviainen, University of Tampere, http://www.uta.fi/yky/en/research/tasti/Staff/Parviainen.html

Juha Tuunainen, University of Oulu, http://www.oulu.fi/kauppakorkeakoulu/henkilokunta/tuunainen-juha-0

We would like to invite you to propose a session. CfP will be published in early February. If you want to include your session in CfP, please send your abstract (max. 300 word ) to reetta.muhonen@uta.fi by 31 January. Sessions in English and Finnish are accepted.

Please feel free to forward this invitation to any people you think may be interested in attending this event.

 

Kind regards,

Reetta Muhonen (also on behalf of the organising committee)

Chair of the Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies

Research Center for Knowledge, Science, Technology and Innovation Studies, TaSTI

University of Tampere, Finland

 

STS tutkimusta maailmalla – Fulbright stipendiaattina Harvard Kennedy Schoolissa

Tieteen- ja teknologian tutkimuksella (STS) on harvassa yliopistossa oma laitoksensa. Sen sijaan STS on tieteenalan alusta lähtien istunut institutionaalisesti hieman oudoissa paikoissa. Nämä järjestelyt heijastavat useasti nuoren tieteenalamme kehityspolkuja. Kun STS-tutkimus sijoitetaan antropologian, sosiologian, historian tai kauppatieteiden laitokselle kertoo se paitsi tutkimusalan menneisyydestä, mutta useasti myös tulevaisuudesta kyseisessä yliopistossa.

Yksi institutionaalisesti epätavallinen paikka, jossa STS tutkimusta tehdään maailmalla, on Harvardin yliopiston Kennedy School. Harvard Kennedy School on tullut tunnetuksi vahvoista siteistään politiikkaan, eikä käytävillä ole tavatonta nähdä entisten hallitusten jäseniä ja heidän lukuisia turvamiehiään. Syksyllä 2017 Kennedy School sai kyseenalaista huomiota Yhdysvaltojen kansallisessa mediassa vierailevien tutkijoiden (Fellows) nimityksillään. Närkästystä herättivät erityisesti Presidentti Trumpin entisen viestintäjohtajan, Sean Spicerin nimittäminen sekä samaan aikaan Wikileaks-vuotaja Chelsea Manningin Fellow-nimityksen kumoaminen.

Suurten ja poleemisten nimitysten lisäksi Kennedy Schoolin mahtuu myös tutkimusta tekeviä vierailijoita. Olen itse tutkijavaihdossa Harvard Programme on Science, Technology and Society – ohjelman Fellows Progamme:ssa. Kyseessä on tietääkseni suurin vierailevien STS-tutkijoiden ohjelma, johon osallistuu joka vuosi yli kymmenen vierailevaa tutkijaa ja jonka kautta on kulkenut jo yli sata STS-tukijaa ympäri maailman. Omaa osallistumistani on tukenut Fulbright Finlandin stipendi.

Ohjelma on rakentunut tieteenalan uranuurtajan, professori Sheila Jasanoffin työn ympärille. Vierailevat tutkijat tulevat laajalti eri maista ja akateemisista taustoista. Tämän vuoden vierailijoiden tutkimusaiheet ylettyvät psykedeelisten aineiden historiasta, äänen ja akustiikan oikeudellisten kysymysten kautta ydinjätteen loppusijoittamisen hallintaan. Oma tutkimukseni suomalaisista energiapoliittisista keskusteluista on otettu mielenkiinnolla vastaan, ja Suomen energiapoliittiset ratkaisut herättävät kysymyksiä täällä. Olisi helppo ajatella, että näin kirjavan joukon on vaikea kommentoida toistensa töitä. Mutta tässä juuri piilee tieteen- ja teknologian tutkimuksen hienous ja ydin – yhteisen lähestymistavan ansiosta meidän on mahdollista käydä mielekkäitä keskusteluja ja edistää toistemme tutkimusideoita.

Harvardin STS-ohjelma pyrkii vahvistamaan tieteenalakoulutusta intensiivisen ohjelman kautta. Ohjelmaan osallistuminen vaatii merkittävää ajallista sitoutumista vierailevalta tutkijalta, mutta samalla antaa laajan katsauksen tieteenalaan. Syyskauden viikoittainen ohjelma koostui maanantaisesta STS Circle kutsuluennosta, tiistaisesta oman ryhmämme seminaarista ja keskiviikkoisesta Science, Power and Politics –kurssista. Sekä tietysti lukuisista kahvitauoista ja after work -hetkistä. Minulle antoisinta ohjelmassa on ollut tiivis vierailevien tutkijoiden ryhmä, jonka kanssa olemme voineet yhdessä pohtia sekä klassikkoteoksia että toistemme töitä.

Osa ohjelman vierailevista tutkijoista on jo palannut omiin kotiyliopistoihinsa, mutta minä jatkan vielä kevätlukukauden ohjelmassa. Blogiamme lukeville STS-tutkijoille heitän kuitenkin vielä viimeisen vahvan suosituksen: ohjelman hakuaika on nyt auki tammikuun 31. päivään saakka!

Hedelmöityshoidot vievät toivon pimeälle puolelle

Teksti: Elina Helosvuori

Onnistuneet hedelmöityshoidot ovat tuoneet onnea ja iloa perheille ympäri maailmaa. Hoidoissa käymisestä voi kuitenkin muodostua erityisesti naisille lankeava taakka.

HBO:n tuore sarja The Handmaid’s Tale (Orjattaresi) on nostanut Margaret Atwoodin alkuperäisromaaniin perustuvan yhteiskunta-analyysin otsikoihin. Teos kertoo Gileadin totalitaarisesta yhteiskunnasta, jossa lisääntyminen on jäänyt harvojen hedelmällisinä säilyneiden naisten vastuulle. Hedelmällisten naisten arvo määrittyy sen mukaan, tulevatko he raskaaksi ja synnyttävätkö terveen lapsen. Silloinkin, kun naiset onnistuvat lisääntymisessä, heidän arvonsa on välineellinen.

Tutkin työkseni lisääntymisteknologioita. Siksi monella tapaa ajankohtaisessa yhteiskunta-analyysissa huomioni kiinnittää se, että hedelmöitys, raskaus ja synnytys on Gileadissa puhdistettu niistä teknologioista, joilla hedelmättömyyttä ja lisääntymistä omana aikanamme vimmatusti säädellään.

Hedelmöityshoidot tuottivat toivotun lopputuloksen Suomessa ensimmäisen kerran vuonna 1984, vuosi ennen Atwoodin romaanin ilmestymistä. Nykyään hoidot ovat rutiinia. Terveyden ja hyvinvoinninlaitoksen tilastojen mukaan vuonna 2015 jo 5,6 prosenttia Suomessa syntyneistä lapsista sai alkunsa hedelmöityshoidoissa.

Erityisesti hedelmöityshoitojen alkuaikoina feministitutkijat kantoivat huolta siitä, että lisääntymisteknologia sitoo naiset entistä tiiviimmin lisääntymisbiologiaan, raskauteen ja synnyttämiseen. Vaikka hedelmöityshoidot toivat lapsettomuudesta kärsiville toivoa, niiden piiloviesti tuntui olevan, että naisen arvo määrittyy siinä, kuinka hän raskaaksi tulemisesta ja raskaudesta suoriutuu.

Hedelmöityshoidot vuonna 2017 ovat eri asia kuin hedelmöityshoidot 1980-luvulla. Kuitenkin myös vuonna 2015 kaikista aloitetuista hedelmöityshoidosta lapsen syntymään johti vain 18,2 prosenttia. Hoitoja joudutaan usein toistamaan monia kertoja, ja lasta haluava saattaa käydä niissä vuosien ajan.

Lähde: https://freerangestock.com/photos/16398/approaching-thundershowers.html

Sosiologian alan väitöskirjaani varten tekemäni haastattelut osoittavat, että monet hedelmöityshoidoissa käyvät naiset kokevat hoitojakson raskaana ja synkkänä ajanjaksona, jossa toivo ja epätoivo kietoutuvat tiheästi toisiinsa. Pahimmillaan hoidoista voi muodostua arvottava kokemus. Sukusolujen, hormonitoiminnan ja lisääntymiselimistön lääketieteellinen kontrolli nostaa esiin kysymyksiä siitä, mikä oman elämän arvo on, jos se kaikkein hartaimmin toivottu asia jääkin toteutumatta. Eräs haastateltavani totesi, että hoitokokemus ”on muuttanut minua, se määrittää minua”.

Hedelmöityshoitoihin liittyvät kipeät kokemukset eivät välttämättä pääty edes onnistuneisiin hoitoihin. Jotkut haastateltavistani kuvasivat kokevansa lapsettomuutta ja erilaisuutta suhteessa muihin vanhempiin senkin jälkeen, kun toivottu lapsiluku oli hoitojen ansiosta täyttynyt. Lisääntymiselimistön tarkkailu, tutkimuksissa ja toimenpiteissä käyminen sekä lääkkeiden syönti ovat monelle intensiivinen kokemus, jonka työstäminen jatkuu pitkään hoitojen loputtuakin. Siksi erilaisuuden kokemukset nousevat pintaan esimerkiksi sellaisten ystävien seurassa, jotka ovat saaneet lapsia ilman hedelmöityshoitojen apua.

Joskus mahdollisesti vuosia kestäneet hoidot myös päättyvät ilman, että lapsi syntyy. Osa tutkimukseeni osallistuneista naisista kuvasi pystyneensä luopumaan hoidoista vasta, kun niihin liittyvät vastenmieliset tuntemukset kasvoivat sietämättömiksi ja esimerkiksi pelkkä ajatus uudesta hoidosta aiheutti pahoinvointia.

Atwoodin Gileadissa ihmisoikeutensa menettäneet hedelmälliset naiset on sidottu ”biologiseen kohtaloonsa” painajaismaisella tavalla. Lisääntymisen vastuu ja taakka painavat kuitenkin myös omassa todellisuudessamme. Antti Rinteen taannoinen haikailu synnytystalkoiden perään muistuttaa siitä, että talkoovastuuta kantavat nimenomaan naiset. Yli kolmenkymmenen vuoden aikana hedelmöityshoitojen seurauksena on syntynyt jo yli 6 miljoonaa hartaasti odotettua lasta. Samaan aikaan lisääntymisteknologian mahdollisuuksiin liittyvä toivo voi kuitenkin muodostua myös taakaksi, jota on vaikea karistaa harteiltaan.

 

Elina Helosvuori valmistelee Helsingin yliopiston sosiaalitieteiden laitoksella väitöskirjaansa siitä, miten hedelmöityshoidot muokkaavat lapsettomuutta, lisääntymistä ja vanhemmuutta.

Call for papers: “Science, technology and society” – working group at the Annual conference of the Westermarck Society

The Annual conference of the Westermarck Society  will be held under the theme “Circulations” at the University of Eastern Finland, Joensuu campus, on 15-16.3.2018. The keynote speakers are: Amade M’charek (University of Amsterdam), Ruben Andersson (University of Oxford), Mianna Meskus (University of Helsinki) and Maria Åkerman (VTT). STS Helsinki is hosting its own working group and announces call for papers:

 

18. Science, technology and society

Science and Technology Studies (STS) is an interdisciplinary field of study that examines the interaction between society, science, and technology. STS pays attention to how different fields, such as law, politics, and everyday life, become intertwined with science and technology. This is relevant when thinking about heatedly debated topics as diverse as climate change, the role of experts, medicine, genetics, gender, robotics or organic food. The field calls for a deeper understanding of the development, processes, practices and outcomes of such social phenomena. STS explores the mechanisms behind knowledge claims and ontological assumptions that guide our everyday. Or, how a prominent STS scholar, Steve Woolgar, has said: look at how the world defined by science and technology “could be otherwise”.

STS-Helsinki calls for theoretical, methodological and empirical papers on current research in social studies of science. Papers both in Finnish and English are welcome. The aim of this working group is to offer a forum to discuss the practices that contribute to the shaping of technoscientific objects and subjects. How is scientific knowledge established and negotiated, and how historical processes contribute to the development of certain technologies? We also welcome papers discussing the specific topic of circulations. This working group is defined as a meeting point for both Finnish and international scholars to share and discuss their work with others studying science, technology and society.

__________________________________________

Submit your abstract directly to the working group coordinator. The descriptions of the working groups and contact information of the coordinators can be found at www.sosiologipaivat.fi.

The final deadline for the abstracts is Monday 22.1.2018. The length of the abstract is max. 300 words and it should be in .doc, .dox or in .rtf-format.

 

!!! UPDATE: CALL EXTENDED TO 2.2.2018 !!!

 

On behalf of STS Helsinki the coordinator is: Heta Tarkkala  (heta.tarkkala@uef.fi)

Population genetics and the making of genetic belonging

Genetic roots are not discovered, they are made. This is the central argument of my book Population Genetics and Belonging, recently published by Palgrave Macmillan. The book is the final outcome of my postdoc project (2011-2016), funded by the Academy of Finland and Kone Foundation, which set out to explore how population genetics has changed ideas of nation, national origins and destinies, and structures of belonging. I had the privilege to finish the book in the interdisciplinary research community of the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies.

Population geneticists study genetic differences within and between populations. Such differences are often invisible, that is, they are molecular variation that doesn’t direct visible physiological characteristics. My project started with a simple observation: population genetics has refashioned the relations between populations in ways that don’t match the idea of nations as clearly defined entities – patterns of genetic variation don’t follow national borders. Yet the ways in which population genetics reached into the past beyond the historical roots of nation-states clearly appealed to those wishing to imagine nations as foundational units of social existence. Understanding this contradiction was the initial motivation for my project: How do national narratives establish nations as rooted in foundational moments of human evolutionary history without ending up dismissing the nation as a recent historical development?

In the course of the project, and through various intellectual detours and dead ends, this question began to take a new shape. While population genetics indeed provided a narrative resource for national imaginaries (which structure enterprises such as national genomic initiatives), it also acted as an important narrative resource for other forms of belonging, such as regional, continental, ethnic and personal belonging.

My book explores tensions and resonances between these alternative forms of belonging. It argues that what makes population genetics appealing is precisely the ambiguity of genetic belonging. This ambiguity arises from the relationality of population genetic knowledge. In population genetics, sameness and difference are not fixed. Sameness and difference are produced through technological choices (such as the use of mitochondrial, Y-chromosome or genome-wide techniques), methodological decisions (such as genetic markers chosen for analysis), and points of comparison (such as genetic databases or cell lines available for analysis).

Population Genetics and Belonging traces how this relationality enables population genetics to become entangled with discourses and practices of national, regional, ethnic and personal belonging from the late 1980s until today. The book focuses on selected case studies, including the theory of Mitochondrial Eve (the most recent common maternal ancestor) in the late 1980s and Y-Chromosome Adam (the most recent common paternal ancestor) in the mid-1990s; the use of DNA analysis in the study of two ancient human remains known as Kennewick Man and Cheddar Man; the ontological multiplicity of roots in commercial genetic ancestry tests; tensions between national and continental genetic belonging in the case of “Finnish genes”; and the uses of genetic ancestry in debates about immigration in contemporary societies. Throughout the book, I argue that the alternative forms of belonging that population genetics has engendered are entangled with ideas of gender, sexuality, race and class, and that the affective structures of genetic belonging reflect those intersecting differences.

I hope that the book helps us make some sense of the complex political, social and cultural implications of population genetic knowledges in contemporary societies.

Link to the book: http://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783319628806

 

Venla Oikkonen

 

Venla Oikkonen (PhD in Gender Studies, 2010) is Research Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies. Her research interests include evolution, genetics, vaccine debates, epidemics, affect and intersectionality. Her first book Gender, Sexuality and Reproduction in Evolutionary Narratives was published by Routledge in 2013.

 

 

 

On Winning the Hearts and Minds of Shamans and Leprechauns

How science and scientists engage with the public is a matter of growing importance in the so-called post-truth era. I contend that instead of defending science and its epistemic authority at any cost and by any manner, public science education should engage science sceptics on even terms and with respect.

Saturday April 22nd 2017 marked the first March for Science in Finland, held as part of a worldwide movement for science and higher education (https://www.marchforscience.com/). Whatever its impact was, the march definitely is an interesting sign of the times. In at least some sections of western societies, there is concern for the epistemic authority of science and scientific expertise. Denigration of scientific expertise, however science might be perceived, is evident in the populist political rhetoric in both old and new continent. The same goes for Finland: the conservative, centre-right populist coalition government has been very unrelenting in its cuts to educational funding, seems to freewheel on facts, and has instigated a “restructuring” of university funding. In 2016-2017 this resulted in a rather gloomy mood in the Finnish academia.

In the March for Science, students and faculty members rallied around the flags of universities, along with some interested politicians, in a show of unity and power directed towards the national government.

It surely is important for universities to secure funding and respect from the government. However, the war for science will be won in the hearts and minds of lay people – people (understood here in a very monolithic sense) who are rarely in a position to contribute to scientific change and its progress, people who are outsiders to the scientific establishment. As every vote in election counts, the lay perception of science does matter a great deal to scientists and universities.

Therefore, it is important to take some time to think about other, maybe more mundane and less spectacular engagements with the powerful public opinion than science marches.

Enter the Finnish cosmologist Kari Enqvist, author of numerous books in popular science and a regular contributor to national broadcasting corporation YLE. Enqvist recently published a short column titled “Goodbye Leprechauns, Welcome Science” (https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-9544273, YLE 4.4.2017).

Enqvist’s polemical text addresses the challenge of the post-truth era and what he sees as contemporary denigration of science. Enqvist urges all sensible citizens to step up and say: “truth matters”. Truth, he says, is not merchandise.

The less sensible citizens, forming a considerable portion of Finnish population according to Enqvist, are sceptical of science in general. They think that science is but one of many ways to understand the surrounding world, and a limited way at that. Enqvist lumps the science sceptics together with shamans who see and believe in leprechauns and explain the world in terms of mystical energies and vibrations. In fact, leprechauns seem to run the world now, as is evident to Enqvist from what is happening in Turkey and the US.

I also have, much like Enqvist, a troubled relationship with shamans who see and believe in leprechauns. I almost refuse to believe that the mad king of leprechauns, Donald Trump, exists. I am also very, very worried about Finnish leprechauns with revisionist ideas of history and human rights, and the manifest normalization of racism in Finnish politics and society. And, I am generally troubled when people in position of power talk over people, talk beside the point (and past facts) and denigrate science for whatever ends; ends usually other than the common good or inclusive society.

Thus, I wholeheartedly agree with Enqvist on most accounts. However, I find it difficult to accept his divisive manner to argue for his point: either you are smart and side with me and science, or you are completely silly. The manner in which Enqvist discredits science sceptics implicitly places scientific truth beyond public criticism. This is hardly an attempt at creating dialogue or constructive engagement in public science education.

I will get back to public science education and dialogue in the end. Enqvist’s account of science lacks so much nuance, that I first feel compelled to analyse his position.

The science monolith

Enqvist’s position implies the 1950s imaginary of science for progress and social justice, an attempt to redeem the science that won the war, or an attempt to make a case for the republic of science – however you want to express that normative ideal of science. Science equals truth with regard to the external objective reality, and policies should abide.

Not included in Enqvist’s implicit narrative, I suspect, are the trials and tribulations of (e.g.) the 1960s and 1970s, when science and its harbinger industries got associated with environmental degradation and other related disasters. Science wasn’t always (and still isn’t) all about fighting the climate change, you know – it was also about creating the petrochemical and nuclear industries and waste, the nuclear threat, misuse of pesticides and all that. Somehow pristine science, in its attempt to harness and control nature, succeeded in coupling progress with very ugly consequences, both in popular imagination and in the real. (Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring and its impact serves as a fine global example of this, see also Harry Collins’ 2014 book Are We All Scientific Expert Now? for its nice introduction.)

The criticism from sixties to eighties was spearheaded by social movements, which championed for values that science and the industries had perhaps forgotten about in their hunger for progress and prosperity. This was manifest in demands for (e.g.) environmental protection, alongside with the associated regulatory ideals, democratic governance and rights-based thinking.

I am fairly sure that Enqvist’s sensible citizens hold these values and ideals as central to their cultural form of life, yet in the past the values and ideals were side-lined by the careless progress driven by the science that Enqvist so reveres.

This one, is also a truth that matters to sensible citizens.

My argument here is that science cannot be understood or presented as a monolithic institution, impervious to public criticism, as Enqvist’s column seems to indicate. By insisting on this kind of idealized image of science, coupled with the explicitly stated idea of science as producing truth that corresponds to external reality, he actually does a disservice to popular image of science. For science is very much embedded in its economic, social and political dimensions.

Cosmology is a case in point. To a casual observer, cosmology mostly serves the general public as an inspirational medium. Cosmological research must be funded somehow, though, and therefore the revered science of heavenly bodies becomes a subject of social, economic and political considerations: the discipline has a history also on a smaller than cosmological scale. (Not familiar with the field I probably miss important social, political and economic applications of cosmology, for which I have to apologize.)

Science for public and policy

Science and its harbinger industries, when not subject to regulation, are just as prone to screw up as they are prone to create prosperity and progress. Too big promises from scientists lead to big disappointments when scientists (eventually, some would say) fail to deliver the goods. Claiming that science is infallible and should not be openly questioned will lead to a popular sense of treachery. (Again, Collins 2014 is the go-to reference.)

Thus, science should be open to public discussion and criticism, if not for the esoteric knowledge it produces, then for the kind of impact the use of that knowledge has in our lives. Science, truth and progress should not trump everything else by default, and there must be room for criticism – even for scepticism towards science.

The notion of scepticism presents another spectre that Enqvist is eager to point out: relativism. Echoing the 1990s “science wars” (mostly fought in the US between cultural studies scholars and natural scientists), Enqvist has a word to say about postmodern thought:

“Up to now, all kinds of imaginaries have been met with kindness. Each one of us have their own story to tell, the post-modern philosophers preached, while teaching us to be tolerant. Everyone’s story is equally valuable, they explained, and the media has really embraced this by publishing any mumbo-jumbo without criticism, only to increase sales.”(translation by the author)

This, Enqvist states, must end now.

His text is, of course, a very truncated presentation of postmodern thought and relativism in general, and seems to place too much of weight on social influence of philosophical thought. In science studies relativism has some purchase methodologically (check out the principle of symmetry in “Edinburgh strong programme”), and the extreme forms of relativistic postmodern thinking are, well, extreme.

In any case, I have no trouble in agreeing with Enqvist that not all stories are of equal worth. It is partly a question of context and purpose – what works for a tabloid should not automatically work for purposes of policy making. The worrying thing (I am channelling Enqvist again) is that the tabloid-reading public, the lay people who also vote, are the ones most apt to get corrupted by visions of truth that Enqvist associates with shamans and leprechauns.

Strategies of public science education

The problem with Enqvist’s text is that he himself seems insensitive to the context and position he writes from. He is oblivious to the fact that he also has to earn respect and following, and that his status as a scientist alone might not be enough to sway people. That is why his writing strategy and his divisive argumentation are problematic from the point of view of public science education – in winning the hearts and minds of the lay people.

In an example of this, Enqvist states that science is characterised by humility, as scientific progress (apparently) is a story of successive falsifications of assumed truths. Therefore, not one scientist would ever present himself as someone in possession of certain knowledge, if not for nothing else, then for the fear of getting ridiculed by his peers.

Enqvist finishes his text with the following message to science sceptics:

“Stick your subjective sensation, for a while, where the sun does not shine. Try to learn some humility. Ask yourselves for once: could I be wrong?”

Engaging adversaries in a dialogue across the science-public divide requires true cross-disciplinary competence from a scientist. The same humility that Enqvist values within scientific community and in relation to knowledge is completely lacking in his relation to the public.

Thus, Enqvist truly lives up to his vocation that truth is not merchandise. Talking over (using power over) people requires very little transaction between discussants. However, a persuasive science educator needs something to win people over, to make them want to buy the idea that science is our best way of coming to grips with the surrounding world. In pluralist liberal democracies a citizen, arguing his case in the public sphere, has to engage others with some respect in order for his ideas to gain currency.

The western world in general does not embrace the priestly class of scientists quite like they used to, and this is especially true of the science sceptics. Instead of enlisting new allies for his cause or creating dialogue, Enqvist presents himself as an arrogant scientist, making the gap between science and its sceptics grow even larger. What science sceptics might infer from Enqvist’s text, is that they should not trust a scientist who does not respect them, especially since he is telling people what to think, and how to think.

With no special authority among the science sceptics, to them Enqvist comes across as someone who is dangerously close to what the cosmologist himself would call a shaman. Sadly, the special science vibrations that Enqvist could bring to the table for the sceptics are now lost in mutual disrespect. Could scientists in their zeal foster something else as well, such as constructive dialogue, between scientists and science sceptics?

 

Jaakko Taipale

STS Helsinki | University of Helsinki

“Framing energy” at the hopefulNESS conference

The Nordic Environmental Social Sciences (NESS) conference is one of those events where we, researchers studying environmental issues from a social scientific perspective, have the opportunity to meet our peers and have great discussions. The NESS conference series started in 1993 and has since been biennially hosted in one of the Nordic countries, this time in Tampere, Finland. This year’s theme of hopefulness could not have been more apt in a time of increasingly gloomy environmental news. Indeed, the keynotes by Professor James Meadowcroft, Dr. Jo Mylan, Professor Esther Turnhout, Dr. Morgan Meyer and Professor Emeritus Yrjö Haila were critical but remained cautiously hopeful about the future.

Professor Meadowcroft highlighted how we are far from having exhausted the potential of environmental states, stressing how we cannot know their limits prior to testing them. Professor Turnhout, in turn, presented the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystems Services (IPBES) as a test case for the democratization of knowledge through its regional and global assessments. However, she stressed that this is possible only if and when closure is resisted and technologies of humility and accountability fostered.

In addition to inspiring keynotes, one of the unique features of the NESS conferences is structuring working groups around full papers with pre-appointed commentators. This enables more detailed comments and fruitful discussions than the usual, rushed conference presentations. Together with other researchers from the Environmental Policy Research Group at the University of Helsinki, we hosted a working group titled ‘Framing energy: between hope, hype and hopelessness’.

In gathering the working group, we were inspired by the large amount of discourse-oriented studies examining energy politics and transitions in the recent years. These studies often discuss meaning-making processes related to currently occurring changes in energy systems at large, and how these changes are turned into issues and concerns. We wanted to bring some of this research together to ask how the multiple aspects surrounding energy become issues. Are there cases where they do not become issues at all? How do particular framings produce specific outcomes?

What we noticed in the working group were wide-ranging and divergent perspectives on the topic. From a theoretical perspective, contributions ranged from psychological approaches and sociotechnical imaginaries to performative politics. The working group examined energy issues at multiple scales: from the individual through to the local, regional, national and international. Empirically, the studies relied on a variety of materials, including surveys, interviews, news articles, academic articles and participation observation. For an overview of the working group’s papers, please see pages 44-50 of the NESS book of abstracts.

Despite such divergent theoretical, scalar and empirical starting points, we did see similarities in how energy issues were approached. First, energy was viewed as deeply entangled with societal processes and practices. Second, and related, most studies paid attention to issues around energy as material-semiotic, where it is undesirable to separate discursive developments from material processes of change. Finally, most cases were based on empirically rich material, reflecting the wide availability of energy issues to be studied.

With this brief summary we, the organizers, would like to thank all the participants of our working group and wish them well in proceeding with their work! We would also like to thank all the participants and especially the organizers of the hopefulNESS 2017 conference. We look forward to our next meet-up in Luleå in 2019!

Kamilla Karhunmaa & Karoliina Isoaho

Experimentation and Evidence – Symposium next week in Helsinki

8-9.6.2017 an “Experimentation and Evidence” -symposium is going to take place at The House of Science and Letters (Kirkkokatu 6) in Helsinki. It is organized by  The Finnish Society for Science and Technology and The Finnish Association for Medical Law and Ethics. The symposium aims at examining the ontological, epistemological and practical issues in the process of creating, validating, and revisioning knowledge.

On thursday 8th of June at 12:30 the keynotes are:

Professor Barbara Prainsack (King’s College London): Harder, better,       faster? Evidence in citizen science

Professor Ilpo Helén (University of Eastern Finland): Innovation and experimentality: Remarks on a configuration of science and politics

And on friday 8th of June at 12:15 the keynotes are:

Professor Michael Guggenheim (Goldsmiths, University of London): Making STS experimental: Evidencing the future of risk

Comment by Associate Professor Eeva Luhtakallio (University of Tampere)

Please see the full program at: http://www.fssts.fi/index.php?page=news-2