首页> 外文OA文献 >The Use and Misuse of Science: Refining the Theoretical Framework of Science Policy
【2h】

The Use and Misuse of Science: Refining the Theoretical Framework of Science Policy

机译:科学的运用与滥用:完善科学政策的理论框架

摘要

This poster examines the use and misuse of science information in the federal government. Scientific information is a vital component of policy making in the U.S. today. Stine notes that science research is ???intricately linked to societal needs and the nation???s economy in areas such as transportation, communication, agriculture, education, environment, health, defense, and jobs??? [7, p. i]. In the past, the relationship between science and policy was seen as a linear process: science conducted research, collected data, and presented its findings to federal agencies, which then use that evidence to determine the best policy action [2, 5].However, the reality of science policy is far more complex; while science is a valuable source of information, it is also problematic, since scientific data may conflict with political, moral, and economic values [5, 6, 7]. For example, if endangered fish reside in a lake, politicians may face choices between preserving the ecosystem, irrigating nearby farms, and allowing recreational use of the lake. Each choice has economic, environmental, and political ramifications. Doremus explains that ???esthetic, ecological, educational, historical, recreational, or scientific??? values can all be considered relevant foundations for agency decisions [3, p. 1136]. Because of this complexity, ???the political community and the scientific community??? collaborate at the boundary of politics and science over the integrity and productivity of research??? [5, p. 143]. In this conceptualization, ???government cannot make good policy decisions unless the decision makers have access to, and appropriately use, the best available understanding of the facts??? [4, p. 1639].Federal agencies, like individuals, have information behaviors???they create, access, review, share, evaluate, and act upon information in order to formulate and assess public policy.Agencies could accept scientific conclusions and use them as the basis of policy formation. Agencies could accept the science, yet determine that it is not the best or sole basis of effective policy. Of course, agencies could reject or partially reject the science, thus creating more opportunities to basis policy on other considerations. Typical agency behavior with respect to science falls across a spectrum, with science being neither unreservedly endorsed nor discarded. While ???a scientist views science as a way of learning, a policy maker???may see science as the justification for a decision, a requirement of the law, a tool or impediment, or something that opposes or supports their viewpoint??? [1, p. 1005]. Furthermore, agency information behavior with respect to science does not exist in isolation. There is recurring interaction between science and policy. For instance, scientists who study the toxic effects of chemicals and report their conclusions to the Environmental Protection Agency, to guide agency behavior, will likely continue studying the same chemicals and providing additional information to further influence policy. How the EPA behaves with respect to the scientific information may shape future research, communication efforts, or the information behaviors of the scientists themselves.Principal-agent theory is frequently used to explain how science and policy interact. Under this approach, federal agencies, as principals, contract with science to provide needed information. Science then acts as an agent, supplying data and conclusions in exchange for funding, prestige, and other rewards [5, 6]. Principal-agent theory captures a significant portion of the interaction between science and policy, but does not reflect the entire relationship. Specifically, principal-agent theory has little to say about how agencies use science???the information behaviors in which they engage???or how these information behaviors affect subsequent interaction with scientists. The theory currently does not address the problem of under-utilized or under-appreciated agents. If the agents perceive their work is not incorporated into policy, perhaps they will refuse to do further work, will begin doing shoddy work, or will attempt to subtly integrate policy advice into their work. Since these information behaviors are, in fact, a crucial part of formulating policy, they ought not be overlooked.The nature of the recurring interactions, and how they are affected by agencies??? information behavior, has not been explicitly examined in the previous literature. This poster illuminates these aspects of the relationships between science and policy. Specificexamples of agencies using and misusing scientific information will be drawn from the literature to illustrate the complex interactions. The full, cyclical relationship between science and policy will be portrayed, demonstrating how agencies??? information behaviors may affect subsequent research and communication behaviors. This will necessarily entail a refinement of principal-agent theory as it has been applied to science policy.This research will be a valuable contribution in several ways. It brings science policy???how scientific information is used or misused???to the explicit attention of iSchools and their cognate fields of study. As we create technological tools and engage in policy-relevant research, we need to pay attention to how our data and conclusions may or may not be utilized. In addition, science policy can benefit from the theoretical and conceptual rigor of the trans-disciplinary research of the iSchools. Finally, the research will also test and strengthen the use of principal-agent theory as it applies to science policy. Overall, this theory has great utility, but can be refined to address more of the interaction between science and policy.
机译:该海报检查了联邦政府中科学信息的使用和滥用。科学信息是当今美国决策的重要组成部分。斯坦恩指出,科学研究在交通,通讯,农业,教育,环境,卫生,国防和工作等领域与社会需求和国家经济有着千丝万缕的联系。 [7,p。一世]。过去,科学与政策之间的关系被视为一个线性过程:科学进行研究,收集数据并将其发现提交给联邦机构,然后联邦机构使用这些证据来确定最佳的政策措施[2,5]。 ,科学政策的现实要复杂得多;尽管科学是有价值的信息来源,但它也存在问题,因为科学数据可能会与政治,道德和经济价值发生冲突[5、6、7]。例如,如果湖泊中栖息着濒临灭绝的鱼,那么政客们可能会面临以下选择:保护生态系统,灌溉附近的农场以及休闲娱乐湖泊。每种选择都有经济,环境和政治影响。 Doremus解释说:“审美,生态,教育,历史,娱乐或科学”价值观都可以被认为是机构决策的相关基础[3,p。2]。 1136]。由于这种复杂性,“政治共同体和科学共同体”在政治和科学的边界上就研究的完整性和生产力进行合作??? [5,p。 143]。在这种概念化中,“除非决策者能够获得并适当地使用对事实的最佳理解,否则政府就无法做出良好的政策决策。” [4,p。 [1639]。联邦机构,像个人一样,具有信息行为,他们可以创建,访问,审查,共享,评估信息并根据信息采取行动,以制定和评估公共政策。代理机构可以接受科学结论并以此为基础政策形成。机构可以接受科学,但可以确定它不是有效政策的最佳或唯一基础。当然,机构可以拒绝或部分拒绝科学,从而创造更多机会将政策基于其他考虑。与科学有关的典型代理行为涉及各个领域,科学既无保留地得到认可,也不被丢弃。当科学家将科学视为一种学习方式时,决策者可能会将科学视为决策的正当理由,法律的要求,工具或障碍或反对或支持其观点的某些东西? ?? [1,p。 1005]。此外,关于科学的代理信息行为并不是孤立存在的。科学与政策之间经常发生互动。例如,研究化学物质毒性作用并向环境保护局报告其结论以指导该机构行为的科学家可能会继续研究相同的化学物质并提供更多信息以进一步影响政策。 EPA在科学信息方面的行为方式可能会影响未来的研究,交流努力或科学家自身的信息行为。委托代理理论通常用于解释科学与政策如何相互作用。在这种方法下,联邦机构作为负责人与科学签约以提供所需的信息。然后,科学充当代理,提供数据和结论,以换取资金,声望和其他奖励[5,6]。委托-代理理论占据了科学与政策之间相互作用的很大一部分,但并未反映出整个关系。具体来说,委托人理论几乎没有说代理机构如何利用科学-它们所参与的信息行为-或这些信息行为如何影响与科学家的后续互动。目前,该理论并未解决未充分利用或未充分认识的代理人的问题。如果代理人认为他们的工作没有纳入政策中,他们可能会拒绝做进一步的工作,开始从事伪劣的工作,或者试图将政策建议巧妙地整合到他们的工作中。由于这些信息行为实际上是制定政策的关键部分,因此不应忽略它们。经常性交互的性质以及它们如何受到代理的影响???信息行为,在以前的文献中尚未明确检查。这张海报阐明了科学与政策之间关系的这些方面。从文献中可以得出机构使用和滥用科学信息的具体例子,以说明复杂的相互作用。将描绘科学与政策之间的完整,周期性关系,演示如何代理???信息行为可能会影响后续的研究和沟通行为。这将必然需要对委托代理理论进行完善,因为它已经应用于科学政策。这项研究将在几个方面做出宝贵的贡献。它将科学政策-如何使用或滥用科学信息-引起了iSchools及其相关研究领域的明确关注。在创建技术工具并从事与政策相关的研究时,我们需要注意如何利用或不利用我们的数据和结论。此外,科学政策可以得益于iSchools跨学科研究的理论和概念上的严格性。最后,该研究还将检验和加强委托代理理论在科学政策中的应用。总体而言,该理论具有很大的实用性,但可以完善以解决科学与政策之间的更多相互作用。

著录项

  • 作者

    Oltmann Shannon Melody;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2010
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 {"code":"en","name":"English","id":9}
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号