Koski Cheryl A
Department of Journalism and Media Studies, Science Journalism Program, University of South Florida, 140 Seventh Avenue South, FCT 204, St. Petersburg, FL 33701-5016, USA.
New Genet Soc. 2005 Dec;24(3):265-81. doi: 10.1080/14636770500349791.
Increasingly scientists and governmental policymakers find themselves leaving their laboratories and office cubicles to share information and decision making with the general public. Contributing in large part to the development of science communication via the mass media has been the Human Genome Project (HGP). Examining the development of the HGP in the United States beginning with the early 1970s helps to establish why and how the general public has become a major player in science policy in the United States during the past quarter century, especially in regard to the ethical, legal, and social implications of research on human genetics. Calling into question the technological imperative--the idea that all things scientific must be pursued without question--the general public came to realize that exerting control over research funding is the key to participating in the scientific process.
越来越多的科学家和政府政策制定者发现自己离开了实验室和办公室格子间,与普通公众分享信息并共同决策。人类基因组计划(HGP)在很大程度上推动了通过大众媒体进行的科学传播的发展。审视美国从20世纪70年代初开始的人类基因组计划的发展,有助于弄清楚为什么以及普通公众如何在过去四分之一世纪里成为美国科学政策中的主要参与者,特别是在人类遗传学研究的伦理、法律和社会影响方面。普通公众对技术必要性提出了质疑——即所有科学事物都必须毫无疑问地进行探索这一观念——并逐渐意识到对研究资金施加控制是参与科学进程的关键。