| Literature DB >> 31151371 |
Katharine Dommett1, Warren Pearce1.
Abstract
Recent developments in contemporary politics have cast doubt on the status of expertise and led to the oft-repeated claim that the public have had enough of experts. In response, we review existing survey measures on experts and expertise in the European Union and United Kingdom with three main findings. First, there is insufficient survey data available to strongly support any claims regarding public attitudes to experts. Second, the evidence that does exist suggests broadly positive public attitudes towards experts, rather than the somewhat bleak commentary associated with descriptions of a 'post-truth' era. Third, there is scope for survey questions to provide improved macro-level descriptions of some of the attributes and expectations associated with experts, and that concepts from the academic literature can provide structure for such questions. Survey data has the potential to complement more granular, qualitative approaches as part of an interpretive social science approach.Entities:
Keywords: brexit; interaction of experts and publics; interpretive social science; opinion polls; opinion surveys; public opinion of experts; public understanding of science; science experts
Year: 2019 PMID: 31151371 DOI: 10.1177/0963662519852038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Underst Sci ISSN: 0963-6625