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| Funder | Riksbankens Jubileumsfond |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Uppsala University |
| Country | Sweden |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2023 |
| Duration | 1,094 days |
| Number of Grantees | 4 |
| Roles | Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator |
| Data Source | Swedish Research Council |
| Grant ID | P20-0463_RJ |
Concern regarding an increasingly ambivalent relationship between expert knowledge and democratic decision-making comes from two directions. One laments the declining legitimacy of expert knowledge. The other identifies risks in experts growing in strength due to scientization of decision-making.
Both raise concerns about democratic impacts, where the gap between demands of knowledge and public understanding of science becomes colonized by populists or technocratic authoritarians.
A critical challenge is therefore to find working relationships between the public and science that balance the need for expertise with political equality. Government agencies that produce scientific evidence are pivotal to meeting this challenge.
Depending on agencies’ technical reputation, they may contribute to public deliberation, but they may also freeze deliberation by framing debates in narrow terms.
To explore how relationships between the public and sciences might develop, this project will investigate how government agencies’ efforts to maintain reputations for technical expertise influence public democratic deliberation.
To do so it will map relationships between publics and expert government agencies through surveys, experiments and comparative case studies.
Bridging the intersections of expertise, public opinion, deliberative theory, and government agency reputational literatures, it will focus in particularly on agencies within Health and Environment portfolios in Sweden and Australia.
Uppsala University
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