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      Participation as Post-Fordist Politics: Demos, New Labour, and Science Policy

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      Minerva
      Springer Netherlands
      Participation, Engagement, Post-Fordism, Knowledge economy, New Labour

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          Abstract

          In recent years, British science policy has seen a significant shift ‘from deficit to dialogue’ in conceptualizing the relationship between science and the public. Academics in the interdisciplinary field of Science and Technology Studies (STS) have been influential as advocates of the new public engagement agenda. However, this participatory agenda has deeper roots in the political ideology of the Third Way. A framing of participation as a politics suited to post-Fordist conditions was put forward in the magazine Marxism Today in the late 1980s, developed in the Demos thinktank in the 1990s, and influenced policy of the New Labour government. The encouragement of public participation and deliberation in relation to science and technology has been part of a broader implementation of participatory mechanisms under New Labour. This participatory program has been explicitly oriented toward producing forms of social consciousness and activity seen as essential to a viable knowledge economy and consumer society. STS arguments for public engagement in science have gained influence insofar as they have intersected with the Third Way politics of post-Fordism.

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          Most cited references17

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          Public engagement as a means of restoring public trust in science--hitting the notes, but missing the music?

          This paper analyses the recent widespread moves to 'restore' public trust in science by developing an avowedly two-way, public dialogue with science initiatives. Noting how previously discredited and supposedly abandoned public deficit explanations of 'mistrust' have actually been continually reinvented, it argues that this is a symptom of a continuing failure of scientific and policy institutions to place their own science-policy institutional culture into the frame of dialogue, as possible contributory cause of the public mistrust problem. Copyright 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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            The Politics of Talk: Coming to Terms with the 'New' Scientific Governance

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              New Labour's citizens: activated, empowered, responsibilized, abandoned?

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                cthorpe@ucsd.edu
                Journal
                Minerva
                Minerva
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0026-4695
                1573-1871
                20 November 2010
                20 November 2010
                December 2010
                : 48
                : 4
                : 389-411
                Affiliations
                Department of Sociology, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, mail code 0533, La Jolla, CA 92093-0533 USA
                Article
                9157
                10.1007/s11024-010-9157-8
                2999726
                21258426
                02de74ac-63ea-477b-869c-e796fca31f64
                © The Author(s) 2010
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                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2010

                Sociology
                knowledge economy,new labour,participation,post-fordism,engagement
                Sociology
                knowledge economy, new labour, participation, post-fordism, engagement

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