Literature DB >> 34222707

Learning in Crisis: Training students to monitor and address irresponsible knowledge construction by U.S. federal agencies under Trump.

Chris Tirrell1, Laura Senier1, Sara Ann Wylie1, Cole Alder1, Grace Poudrier1, Jesse DiValli1, Marcy Beck2, Eric Nost3, Rob Brackett2, Gretchen Gehrke2.   

Abstract

Immediately after President Trump's inauguration, U.S. federal science agencies began deleting information about climate change from their websites, triggering alarm among scientists, environmental activists, and journalists about the administration's attempt to suppress information about climate change and promulgate climate denialism. The Environmental Data & Governance Initiative (EDGI) was founded in late 2016 to build a multidisciplinary collaboration of scholars and volunteers who could monitor the Trump administration's dismantling of environmental regulations and science deemed harmful to its industrial and ideological interests. One of EDGI's main initiatives has been training activists and volunteers to monitor federal agency websites to identify how the climate-denialist ideology is affecting public debate and science policy. In this paper, we explain how EDGI's web-monitoring protocols are being incorporated into college curricula. Students are trained how to use the open-source online platforms that EDGI has created, but are also trained in how to analyze changes, determine whether they are significant, and contextualize them for a public audience. In this way, EDGI's work grows out of STS work on "critical making" and "making and doing." We propose that web-monitoring exemplifies an STS approach to responsive and responsible knowledge production that demands a more transparent and trustworthy relationship between the state and the public. EDGI's work shows how STS scholars can establish new modes of engagement with the state, and create spaces where the public can not only define and demand responsible knowledge practices, but also participate in the process of creating STS inspired forms of careful, collective and public knowledge construction.

Year:  2020        PMID: 34222707      PMCID: PMC8248271          DOI: 10.17351/ests2020.313

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Engag Sci Technol Soc        ISSN: 2413-8053


  2 in total

1.  Seeing power with a flashlight: DIY thermal sensing technology in the classroom.

Authors:  Catherine Kenny; Max Liboiron; Sara Ann Wylie
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2019-01-16       Impact factor: 3.885

2.  DATA RESISTANCE: A SOCIAL MOVEMENT ORGANIZATIONAL AUTOETHNOGRAPHY OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL DATA AND GOVERNANCE INITIATIVE.

Authors:  Lourdes A Vera; Lindsey Dillon; Sara Wylie; Jennifer Liss Ohayon; Aaron Lemelin; Phil Brown; Christopher Sellers; Dawn Walker
Journal:  Mobilization       Date:  2018-12
  2 in total

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