Keywords
Social participation to science and technologyCommunication. Mass media
P87-96
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
Language and Literature
P
DOAJ:Media and communication
DOAJ:Social Sciences
Political science (General)
JA1-92
Political science
J
DOAJ:Political Science
DOAJ:Law and Political Science
Science (General)
Q1-390
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In the last decades, production of science and technology as well as science-society relationships started changing rapidly. Research is asked to be more effective, fast, accountable, trans-disciplinary, result-oriented, policy-driven and able to generate benefits for people and firms in the short and middle run. While a strong intensification of science-society relationships is occurring, an increasing number of actors and stakeholders are involved in research production. At the same time, pervasiveness of technology is rendering users an active part in technological development; economic and social interests on science and technology are growing on a global scale; new democratic and ethical issues emerge. Despite the European institutions’ efforts, all those trends and phenomena are occurring in an extremely fragmented way. In this scenario, a fairly balanced and consistent co-evolution between science and society can no longer be taken for granted. This is just the starting point of the following comment section that, through the Luciano d’Andrea, Sally Wyatt, Erik Aarden, Jos Lejten and Peter Sekloča’s writings, aims to analyse the different aspects and questions around the socialisation of science and technology’s matter.Date
2009-09-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:1797d8588d41474ea56e8a3387333f331824-2049
https://doaj.org/article/1797d8588d41474ea56e8a3387333f33
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