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‘Environment(s) in Public?’

Workshop, University of East Anglia, 2-3rd November 2014

Co-organised by the Science in Public Network; 3S research group; and
Broads Authority

Researchers studying the interactions between science and society argue
that rather than thinking about ‘the public’, models of multiple ‘publics’
interacting with specific, situated scientific ideas offers a better way of
understanding scientific communication, public engagement and policy
impact. However, this risks losing sight of broader concepts such as public
debate, the public interest, or what it means to say or do something in
public. In turn, we can ask what does it mean to talk about ‘the
environment’? Given that many passionately engaged environmental debates
have been focused on and in particular places, would it help to abandon
this abstraction and instead talk about places: particular ‘environments’
and how they are changing?

Could it be more productive to ground environmental debates in more
localised questions of landscape, health, animals and people? Localism also
brings its own drawbacks, making it more difficult to recognise or address
global environmental problems. Environmental controversies can also be
understood as conflicts about ‘the politics of scale’, which can emerge at
multiple levels simultaneously. Can science and society research help us
understand these tensions and interactions? How can the debates and ideas
of the past interact with the arguments of today, to shape our thoughts
about possible futures?

This workshop directs these ideas towards today's public environmental
debates, and asks if and how academic research, professional practice, and
day to day life can make use of them. Jointly organised by the Science in
Public Research Network, the 3S (Science, Society, Sustainability) research
group, and the Broads Authority, 'Environment(s) in Public?' will be
grounded in a particular place and set of environments: the city of Norwich
and the rivers, farms, broads and coasts of the East of England. It will
take place at the University of East Anglia on Monday 3rd November,
followed by a public lecture in the evening from Professor David Matless on
the cultural geography of the Broads.

Preceding the workshop, we are planning an evening of talk, song and
storytelling about river environments and the people who study and live
with them, from Tales from the River, during the evening of Sunday 2nd
November.

For further information, please see: http://scienceinpublic.org/environments

Registration will be £20/£15 for students, to cover the cost of rooms and
lunch. To register, please go to
http://scienceinpublic.org/environments/eip-registration/



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Dr. Angela Cassidy
Wellcome Trust Research Fellow
Department of History
Room C3, East Wing
King's College London
Strand, London, WC2R 2LS

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http://kcl.ac.uk/artshums/depts/history/people/staff/academic/cassidya.aspx
http://kcl.academia.edu/AngelaCassidy