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Problematic Publics: A Critical Review of Surveys of Public Attitudes to Biotechnology

Version 2 2024-10-28, 04:05
Version 1 2023-05-16, 14:56
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-28, 04:05 authored by Aidan DavisonAidan Davison, I Barns, R Schibeci
This article discusses a range of recent major surveys of public attitudes toward biotechnology. The authors identify a number of problematic features of the surveys: the use of predominantly consumerist rather than civic conception of public discourse; the assumption of a unitary "general public," a "cognitive deficit" approach to public understanding of science; and the presumption of a politically neutral and instrumentalist model of science and technology. The authors then examine some alternative approaches to exploring perceptions of biotechnology among a diversity of interested publics, including more focused dialogical surveys, consensus conferences, and parliamentary inquiries.

History

Publication title

Science, Technology, & Human Values

Volume

22

Issue

3

Pagination

317-348

ISSN

0162-2439

Department/School

Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences

Publisher

Sage Publications, Inc.

Publication status

  • Accepted

Place of publication

United States

Socio-economic Objectives

230404 Law enforcement

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