The authors demonstrate that the idiom of co-production importantly extends the vocabulary of the traditional social sciences, offering fresh analytic perspectives on the nexus of science, power and culture.
The field of science and technology studies has made considerable progress toward illuminating the relationship between scientific knowledge and political power. This book offers a collection of essays by leading scholars, showing how scientific knowledge embeds, and is embedded, in social identities, institutions, representations and discourses.
1. The Idiom of Co-production 2. Ordering Knowledge, Ordering Society 3. Climate Science and the Making of a Global Political Order 4. Co-producing CITES and the African Elephant 5. Knowledge and Political Order in the European Environment Agency 6. Plants, Power and Development: Founding the Imperial Department of Agriculture for the West Indies, 1880-1914 7. Mapping Systems and Moral Order: Constituting property in genome laboratories 8. Patients and Scientists in French Muscular Dystrophy Research 9. Circumscribing Expertise: Membership categories in courtroom testimony 10. The Science of Merit and the Merit of Science: Mental order and social order in early twentieth-century France and America 11. Mysteries of State, Mysteries of Nature: Authority, knowledge and expertise in the seventeenth century 12. Reconstructing Sociotechnical Order: Vannevar Bush and US science policy 13. Science and the Political Imagination in Contemporary Democracies 14. Afterword