| Literature DB >> 29780179 |
Abstract
This article analyzes the concept of "grand challenges" as part of a shift in how scientists and policymakers frame and communicate their respective agendas. The history of the grand challenges discourse helps to understand how identity work in science and science policy has been transformed in recent decades. Furthermore, the question is raised whether this discourse is only an indicator, or also a factor in this transformation. Building on conceptual history and historical semantics, the two parts of the article reconstruct two discursive shifts. First, the observation that in scientific communication references to "problems" are increasingly substituted by references to "challenges" indicates a broader cultural trend of how attitudes towards what is problematic have shifted in the last decades. Second, as the grand challenges discourse is rooted in the sphere of sports and competition, it introduces a specific new set of societal values and practices into the spheres of science and technology. The article concludes that this process can be characterized as the sportification of science, which contributes to self-mobilization and, ultimately, to self-optimization of the participating scientists, engineers, and policymakers.Entities:
Keywords: Conceptual history; Grand challenges; Identity work; Science policy; Sportification
Year: 2017 PMID: 29780179 PMCID: PMC5948272 DOI: 10.1007/s11024-017-9332-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Minerva ISSN: 0026-4695
Fig. 1Relative frequencies of the terms “problem[s]” and “challenge[s],” extracted from Google Books Ngram Viewer, 1800–2008 (English corpus; case-insensitive; smoothing = 3)
Fig. 2Relative numbers of publications in the Web of Science core collection that contain the terms “problem*” or “challeng*” in their title, 1966–2016 (data accessed February 14, 2017; total n = 53.773.845; smoothing = 3)
Early US science policy documents with explicit GC definitions
| Context / Source | Definition |
|---|---|
| US Federal Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering, and Technology (OSTP | A GC is a fundamental problem in science or engineering, with broad applications, whose solution would be enabled by the application of the high performance computing resources that could become available in the near future |
| US Federal Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering, and Technology (OSTP | A GC is a fundamental problem in science and engineering, with broad economic and scientific impact, whose solution could be advanced by applying high performance computing techniques and resources |
| US National Research Council report on computer science and technology (NRC | As in other fields of scientific endeavor, in computer science and technology there are a number of GC worthy of long-term research support. Such challenges, if successfully met, would generate major advances in the field and create significant spin-offs in industry and government |
| US National Research Council report on environmental sciences (NRC | GC are major scientific tasks that are compelling for both intellectual and practical reasons, that offer potential for major breakthroughs on the basis of recent developments in science and technology, and that are feasible given current capabilities and a serious infusion of resources |
| US Networking and Information Technology Research and Development Program (NITRD | A GC is a long-term science, engineering, or societal advance, whose realization requires innovative breakthroughs in information technology research and development and which will help address our country’s priorities |
Fig. 3Relative numbers of publications in the Web of Science core collection that contain the terms “grand challenge*,” “global challenge*,” or “societal challenge*” in title, abstract, or keywords, 1991–2015 (data accessed February 14, 2017; total n = 37.345.793; smoothing = 3)