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Challenges for the relationship between science and society: developing capacity for ecosystem governance in an emerging democracy

机译:科学与社会之间关系的挑战:新兴民主国家发展生态系统治理的能力

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This paper considers the challenges for the emergence of science/society partnerships in a young democracy in the context of access to, and use of, natural resources. As resource issues and related decision-making gain in complexity and urgency, science is increasingly expected to develop solutions in partnership with the public. Challenges to these partnerships are discussed and supported by observations from a South African case example in water resources management. Within the current governance system for natural resources, there are both an expectation and an opportunity to promote democracy via the civic science process. Key to achieving this is the process of collaborative knowledge generation in which science and the public are knowledge partners. The opportunity is supported by various factors: the resource "supply and demand" dialogue around access to, and use of, resources reinforces democratic processes through the explicit recognition of diverse knowledge systems; the research process makes provision for rigour in the co-creation of knowledge; and the overall expectation of democratic relationships in society creates a milieu favourable for promoting democracy through science. Within the context of a developing country, challenges include low levels of social capital such as trust, empowerment and connectedness. The case study also indicates that there are significant delays in attempts to address differentials in empowerment and trust in the science/society partnership, and that this is a significant barrier for the ability of civic science to be an effective vehicle for deepening democracy. In addition, the civic science endeavour is currently only weakly supported by policy. Unless the imperative for civic science to support democratic governance is institutionalised through policy and strategy, it is unlikely that there will be sufficient human and financial investment in civic science as a means to promote democratic governance. This is especially true for developing countries, whose policies and strategies should support the use of civic science as a means of bridging inequities and meeting urgent development goals together with more medium- and long-term imperatives through the co-creation of knowledge.
机译:本文考虑了在获取和使用自然资源的背景下,年轻的民主国家中科学/社会伙伴关系的出现所面临的挑战。随着资源问题和相关决策的日趋复杂和紧迫性,人们越来越期待科学与公众合作开发解决方案。南非在水资源管理方面的案例实例对这些伙伴关系面临的挑战进行了讨论和支持。在当前的自然资源治理体系中,通过公民科学进程促进民主既有期望,也有机会。实现这一目标的关键是协作知识生成的过程,其中科学和公众是知识合作伙伴。机会受到各种因素的支持:围绕资源获取和使用的资源“供需”对话,通过对各种知识体系的明确认可而加强了民主进程;研究过程为共同创造知识提供了严格的条件;社会对民主关系的总体期望创造了一个有利于通过科学促进民主的环境。在发展中国家的背景下,挑战包括社会资本水平低下,例如信任,赋权和联系。案例研究还表明,在解决赋予权力和对科学/社会伙伴关系的信任方面存在差异的尝试存在大量延迟,这对公民科学成为加深民主的有效手段的能力构成了重大障碍。此外,公民科学事业目前仅受到政策的薄弱支持。除非通过政策和战略使公民科学支持民主治理的必要性制度化,否则就不可能有足够的人力和财力投资于公民科学作为促进民主治理的手段。对于发展中国家而言尤其如此,其政策和战略应支持使用公民科学作为弥合不平等和实现紧急发展目标的手段,以及通过共同创造知识实现更多的中长期任务。

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