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Contested knowledge : science, media, and democracy in kerala

By: Varughese, Shiju Sam.
Contributor(s): Raina, Dhruv.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2017Description: xiii, 290 p. 22 cm.ISBN: 9780199469123.Subject(s): Democracy and science | Regional Cancer Centre | Mediating scienceDDC classification: 501.4 Summary: Science communication, once the exclusive preserve of a scientific elite, has not been immune to the growing influence of mass media over society. As mass media becomes the most prominent site of public deliberation over science, multiple voices - both expert and non-expert - have begun toemerge, rewriting the social contract of science. In the new millennium, the Indian state of Kerala saw a number of scientific controversies being discussed in the regional newspapers. Set against the backdrop of case studies of three major public controversies, Contested Knowledge explores how these mediated disputes brought the otherwise hiddendynamics of scientific knowledge production into full public view. It examines critical questions about "medialized science", such as: What is a scientific-citizenry? How did a "scientific public sphere' develop in Kerala? How does public contestation of knowledge contribute to deliberativedemocracy by re-instilling politics into science? Are there limits to such a democratization of science? A fascinating commentary on the relation between science and society, this volume is a pioneering work that analyses the science-media-public interaction in a non-Western context.
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Science communication, once the exclusive preserve of a scientific elite, has not been immune to the growing influence of mass media over society. As mass media becomes the most prominent site of public deliberation over science, multiple voices - both expert and non-expert - have begun toemerge, rewriting the social contract of science. In the new millennium, the Indian state of Kerala saw a number of scientific controversies being discussed in the regional newspapers. Set against the backdrop of case studies of three major public controversies, Contested Knowledge explores how these mediated disputes brought the otherwise hiddendynamics of scientific knowledge production into full public view. It examines critical questions about "medialized science", such as: What is a scientific-citizenry? How did a "scientific public sphere' develop in Kerala? How does public contestation of knowledge contribute to deliberativedemocracy by re-instilling politics into science? Are there limits to such a democratization of science? A fascinating commentary on the relation between science and society, this volume is a pioneering work that analyses the science-media-public interaction in a non-Western context.

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