Scientisation vs. Civic Expertise in Environmental Governance: Eco-feminist, Eco-modern and Post-modern Responses

This article examines three critical perspectives in green political theory arguing that environmental governance is emerging as an increasingly scientised and technocratic domain. These are contrasted with work under the banner of 'civic expertise' proposing increased citizen deliberation and participation in the scientific realm to reverse the technocratic features of environmental management. Eco-feminism links the rise of technocratic science to an overall critique of modernity, rationality and patriarchy. Eco-modernism aims at re-configuring scientific rationality in terms of reflexive modernisation, and a stronger participatory dimension of civil society. In the postmodern green critique, the ascendancy of regulatory science marks the influence of biopower or green governmentality. Civic expertise is advanced as a middle ground between these contested appraisals of science in modern societies. This is underpinned by a post-positivist account of scientific knowledge and promotes a reform of the scientific endeavour toward enhanced transparency, participation and democratisation.

[1]  Luigi Pellizzoni,et al.  Uncertainty and Participatory Democracy , 2003, Environmental Values.

[2]  Sheila Jasanoff,et al.  (No?) Accounting for expertise , 2003 .

[3]  Silvio Funtowicz,et al.  ‘Democratising’ expertise, ‘expertising’ democracy: What does this mean, and why bother? , 2003 .

[4]  M. Cartmill Primate visions: Gender, race, and nature in the world of modern science , 1991, International Journal of Primatology.

[5]  E. Keller Secrets Of Life, Secrets Of Death , 1992 .

[6]  F. Buttel The Politics of Environmental Discourse: Ecological Modernization and the Policy Process.By Maarten A. Hajer. Oxford University Press, 1995 , 1997 .

[7]  Ulrich Beck,et al.  Ecological Enlightenment: Essays on the Politics of the Risk Society , 1995 .

[8]  S. Jasanoff States of Knowledge: The Co-production of Science and the Social Order , 2004 .

[9]  Martin Chalmers,et al.  Risk Society and the Provident State , 1998 .

[10]  J. Ravetz A paradoxical future for safety in the global knowledge economy , 2003 .

[11]  E. Keller Language and ideology in evolutionary theory: reading cultural norms into natural law , 1991 .

[12]  Rohit Parikh,et al.  States of Knowledge , 2002, WoLLIC.

[13]  M. Foucault Two Lectures , 2022, Culture/Power/History.

[14]  U. Beck The reinvention of politics , 1996 .

[15]  Genevieve Lloyd,et al.  THE MAN OF REASON , 1979 .

[16]  S. Rayner,et al.  Human choice and climate change , 1998 .

[17]  Brian Wynne,et al.  May the sheep safely graze? A reflexive view of the expert-lay knowledge divide. , 2004 .

[18]  M. Edelstein Citizen Science: A Study of People, Expertise and Sustainable Development , 1998 .

[19]  Peter K. Bsumek Biopiracy: The Plunder of Nature and Knowledge , 1999 .

[20]  David McKie,et al.  The Death of Nature , 1997 .

[21]  L. Pellizzoni Reflexive Modernization and Beyond , 1999 .

[22]  C. Merchant The Death of Nature , 1998 .

[23]  J. R. Ravets,et al.  Post-Normal Science , 2006 .

[24]  Primate Visions: Gender, Race and Nature in the World of Modern Science. By Donna Haraway. (New York: Routledge, 1989). ix + 485 pp. Illustrations, notes, bibliography, index. $35.00 hardcover , 1990 .

[25]  Daniel Lee Kleinman,et al.  Science, technology, and democracy , 2002 .

[26]  J. Dryzek Deliberative Democracy And Beyond , 2000 .

[27]  Silvio Funtowicz,et al.  Report of the working group "Democratising expertise and establishing scientific reference systems" , 2001 .

[28]  Chris J. Cuomo Feminism and Ecological Communities: An Ethic of Flourishing , 2002 .

[29]  C. West Churchman,et al.  Science and Decision Making , 1956, Philosophy of Science.

[30]  D. Haraway,et al.  Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium. FemaleMan_Meets_OncoMouse , 1997 .

[31]  James Fairhead,et al.  Manners of contestation: "citizen science" and "indigenous knowledge" in West Africa and the Caribbean , 2002 .

[32]  H. Nowotny Democratising expertise and socially robust knowledge , 2003 .

[33]  S. Jasanoff Technologies of Humility: Citizen Participation in Governing Science , 2003 .

[34]  F. Fischer,et al.  Living with Nature - Environmental Politics as Cultural Discourse , 2003 .

[35]  J. Barry Rethinking Green Politics: Nature, Virtue and Progress , 1998 .

[36]  A. Dobson Green Political Thought , 1990 .

[37]  T. Bowyer-Bower,et al.  Staying Alive: Women, Ecology and Development , 1996 .

[38]  J. Hannigan,et al.  Environmental Sociology: A Social Constructionist Perspective , 1995 .

[39]  J. Clarke Radical Ecology: The Search for a Livable World , 1993 .

[40]  P. Kitcher Science, Truth, and Democracy , 2001 .

[41]  F. Fischer Citizens, Experts, and the Environment: The Politics of Local Knowledge , 2000 .

[42]  L. Pellizzoni,et al.  Democracy and the governance of uncertainty. The case of agricultural gene technologies. , 2001, Journal of hazardous materials.

[43]  M. Mellor Feminism and ecology , 1997 .

[44]  R. King Deliberative Democracy and the Environment , 2005 .

[45]  G. Peterken Living with nature , 1986, Nature.

[46]  Arthur P.J. Mol,et al.  Globalization and Environmental Reform: The Ecological Modernization of the Global Economy , 2001 .

[47]  Steve Fuller,et al.  The Governance of Science , 1999 .

[48]  Maarten A. Hajer,et al.  The Politics of Environmental Discourse , 1997 .

[49]  Richard M. Owsley Contesting Earth’s Future: Radical Ecology and Postmodernity , 1996 .