Post-Normal Science Communication? The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Post-Normal Science Communication? The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future. / Achiam, Marianne.

The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era: Perspectives, Contexts, Dynamics. ed. / Dejan Jontes; Anja Skapin; Marianne Achiam. Ljubljana : Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts, 2024. p. 29-49.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Achiam, M 2024, Post-Normal Science Communication? The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future. in D Jontes, A Skapin & M Achiam (eds), The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era: Perspectives, Contexts, Dynamics. Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts, Ljubljana, pp. 29-49. https://doi.org/10.51746/9789612972417

APA

Achiam, M. (2024). Post-Normal Science Communication? The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future. In D. Jontes, A. Skapin, & M. Achiam (Eds.), The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era: Perspectives, Contexts, Dynamics (pp. 29-49). Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts. https://doi.org/10.51746/9789612972417

Vancouver

Achiam M. Post-Normal Science Communication? The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future. In Jontes D, Skapin A, Achiam M, editors, The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era: Perspectives, Contexts, Dynamics. Ljubljana: Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts. 2024. p. 29-49 https://doi.org/10.51746/9789612972417

Author

Achiam, Marianne. / Post-Normal Science Communication? The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future. The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era: Perspectives, Contexts, Dynamics. editor / Dejan Jontes ; Anja Skapin ; Marianne Achiam. Ljubljana : Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts, 2024. pp. 29-49

Bibtex

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title = "Post-Normal Science Communication?: The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future",
abstract = "The world needs equitable and democratic dialogue. As a global society, we face numerous so-called “wicked problems” related to the unsustainable use of the Earth{\textquoteright}s resources. The notion of wicked problems, developed by Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber in 1973, describes problems that are ill-defined and rely on value judgments for resolution – and are never truly solved. Today, such problems include climate disruption, the biodiversity crisis, and most recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. The process of tackling these problems is exacerbated by the widespread atmosphere of science scepticism and denialism along with delay tactics and misinformation. From a science communication perspective, the situation can seem overwhelming. Often, it is difficult to see how constructive space can be created for the discussions that are necessary to address the challenges we face.In this paper, I will consider the role science centres, science and technology museums, natural history museums, and other public science communication institutions can play in creating inclusive spaces to address these challenges. As I discuss in the paper, science museums have the resources, the expertise, and the social presence to counteract mis- and disinformation and to engage a diversity of stakeholders in co-creating responses to the problems we face.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Museum, Science Centre, Science communication, post-truth",
author = "Marianne Achiam",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
doi = "10.51746/9789612972417",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-961-297-242-4",
pages = "29--49",
editor = "Dejan Jontes and Anja Skapin and Marianne Achiam",
booktitle = "The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era",
publisher = "Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts",
address = "Slovenia",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Post-Normal Science Communication?

T2 - The Role of Science Centres and Museums in an Uncertain Future

AU - Achiam, Marianne

PY - 2024/2

Y1 - 2024/2

N2 - The world needs equitable and democratic dialogue. As a global society, we face numerous so-called “wicked problems” related to the unsustainable use of the Earth’s resources. The notion of wicked problems, developed by Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber in 1973, describes problems that are ill-defined and rely on value judgments for resolution – and are never truly solved. Today, such problems include climate disruption, the biodiversity crisis, and most recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. The process of tackling these problems is exacerbated by the widespread atmosphere of science scepticism and denialism along with delay tactics and misinformation. From a science communication perspective, the situation can seem overwhelming. Often, it is difficult to see how constructive space can be created for the discussions that are necessary to address the challenges we face.In this paper, I will consider the role science centres, science and technology museums, natural history museums, and other public science communication institutions can play in creating inclusive spaces to address these challenges. As I discuss in the paper, science museums have the resources, the expertise, and the social presence to counteract mis- and disinformation and to engage a diversity of stakeholders in co-creating responses to the problems we face.

AB - The world needs equitable and democratic dialogue. As a global society, we face numerous so-called “wicked problems” related to the unsustainable use of the Earth’s resources. The notion of wicked problems, developed by Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber in 1973, describes problems that are ill-defined and rely on value judgments for resolution – and are never truly solved. Today, such problems include climate disruption, the biodiversity crisis, and most recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. The process of tackling these problems is exacerbated by the widespread atmosphere of science scepticism and denialism along with delay tactics and misinformation. From a science communication perspective, the situation can seem overwhelming. Often, it is difficult to see how constructive space can be created for the discussions that are necessary to address the challenges we face.In this paper, I will consider the role science centres, science and technology museums, natural history museums, and other public science communication institutions can play in creating inclusive spaces to address these challenges. As I discuss in the paper, science museums have the resources, the expertise, and the social presence to counteract mis- and disinformation and to engage a diversity of stakeholders in co-creating responses to the problems we face.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Museum

KW - Science Centre

KW - Science communication

KW - post-truth

U2 - 10.51746/9789612972417

DO - 10.51746/9789612972417

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-961-297-242-4

SP - 29

EP - 49

BT - The Ecosystem of Science Communication in the Post-Truth Era

A2 - Jontes, Dejan

A2 - Skapin, Anja

A2 - Achiam, Marianne

PB - Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts

CY - Ljubljana

ER -

ID: 384254385