Democratization of Science and Biotechnological Development: Public Debate on GM Maize in South Africa

P. Mwale
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The Mandela 1 government that came into power in 1994 made the democratization of science and technology a priority in post-apartheid South Africa (Joubert, 2001, p. 316). Attendant ideas of Science Communication and Public Understanding of Biotechnology 2 have hitherto become currency in South Africa’s public sector drive towards the democratization of science. Democratization of science and technology implies that the people as non-experts are an integral part of all deliberations on policy, regulation and control of science and technology, for example, in debates or controversies on issues arising from biotechnology. Democratization of science and technology is about the sociopolitical control of science and technology by wider society. Science and technology must be controlled by wider society because evil-minded groups of people can ill-use it to inflict harm on other groups of people. Moreover, certain unscrupulous and corrupt business entities can collude with the state and/or powerful and influential sociopolitical figures in societies to exploit and abuse indigenous scientific resources as well as endogenous modes of specialized scientific knowledge. On the latter, for example, they can evoke intellectual property rights (IPR) to patent resources that are not theirs historically. Thus, the ideal-type of democracy makes it imperative for the people of South Africa and of other societies in Africa to understand and actively participate in developments in science and technology. 3 This need necessitates increasing scholarly attention to be given to questions of science communication and public understanding of science, arising at the intersection between science, society and politics in South and southern Africa. Some of the major drivers of the processes of the democratization of science are social movements, which are elements of civil society (Ballard, Habib and Valodia, 2006). Social movements do fill and are apt to fill an important gap in science communication and public understanding of biotechnology in South and southern Africa. Scientists are accused generally of being poor communicators of science and technology, preferring to work in isolation, behind closed doors, in laboratories (Latour, 1987). Science communities are notoriously insular (Weingart et al., 2000). News media practitioners are accused of misrepresenting-by distorting, oversimplifying, or sensationalizing-science in public domains and of passively resisting science communication (Joubert, 2001, pp. 324-5). Yet there is a lack of scholarly attention to the role of social movements in the democratization of science in Africa as a whole. Practically, the democratization of science is partial, ad hoc, and biased in South and southern Africa. 4 Therefore, overall, it is unclear what the nature and role of interventions of social movements are in the democratisation of science in Africa.
科学和生物技术发展的民主化:南非关于转基因玉米的公众辩论
1994年上台的曼德拉政府将科技民主化作为后种族隔离时代南非的优先事项(Joubert, 2001年,第316页)。迄今为止,科学传播和公众对生物技术的理解的相关理念已经成为南非公共部门推动科学民主化的货币。科学和技术的民主化意味着作为非专家的人民是关于科学和技术的政策、规章和控制的所有审议的组成部分,例如,在关于生物技术引起的问题的辩论或争论中。科技民主化是指更广泛的社会对科技的社会政治控制。科学技术必须由更广泛的社会控制,因为心怀不端的群体可能会滥用它来伤害其他群体的人。此外,某些不道德和腐败的商业实体可能与国家和/或社会中有权势和有影响力的社会政治人物勾结,剥削和滥用本地科学资源以及内源性专业科学知识模式。例如,在后者上,他们可以唤起对历史上不属于他们的资源的知识产权(IPR)。因此,理想类型的民主使南非人民和非洲其他社会的人民必须了解和积极参与科学和技术的发展。3 .这种需要需要在学术上更多地关注科学传播和公众对科学的理解问题,这些问题是在南非和南部非洲科学、社会和政治的交叉领域产生的。科学民主化进程的一些主要驱动力是社会运动,它们是公民社会的要素(Ballard, Habib和Valodia, 2006)。在南非和南部非洲,社会运动填补了科学传播和公众对生物技术的理解方面的一个重要空白。科学家通常被指责为科学和技术的不良传播者,更喜欢在实验室里闭门孤立地工作(Latour, 1987年)。科学界是出了名的孤立(Weingart et al., 2000)。新闻媒体从业人员被指控在公共领域歪曲、过度简化或耸人听闻地歪曲科学,并被动地抵制科学传播(Joubert, 2001,第324-5页)。然而,学术界对社会运动在整个非洲科学民主化中的作用缺乏关注。实际上,在南非和南部非洲,科学民主化是局部的、临时的和有偏见的。因此,总的来说,社会运动干预在非洲科学民主化中的性质和作用是不清楚的。
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