Indiana University, USA.
Public Underst Sci. 2013 Oct;22(7):799-816. doi: 10.1177/0963662511435054. Epub 2012 Feb 22.
This paper uses data from the US General Social Survey to examine public support for scientists in policy contexts and its link to scientific disciplines. An analysis of attitudes about the amount of influence that environmental scientists, two kinds of medical researchers, and economists should have over policy decisions reveals that in each discipline the extent to which scientists are thought to serve the nation's best interests is the strongest determinant of attitudes about scientists as policy advisors. Perceptions of scientists' technical knowledge and the level of consensus in the scientific community also have direct, albeit weaker effects on opinions about scientists' appropriate roles in policy settings. Whereas previous research has stressed the importance of local variability in understanding the transfer of scientific authority across institutional boundaries, these results point to considerable homogeneity in the social bases of scientific authority in policy contexts.
本文使用美国综合社会调查的数据,考察了公众在政策背景下对科学家的支持及其与科学学科的联系。对公众对环境科学家、两种类型的医学研究人员和经济学家在政策决策中应发挥多大影响力的态度进行分析后发现,在每一学科中,科学家服务于国家最佳利益的程度是决定人们对科学家作为政策顾问的看法的最强决定因素。对科学家技术知识的看法以及科学界的共识程度也对有关科学家在政策制定中适当角色的看法有直接影响,尽管这种影响较弱。尽管先前的研究强调了理解科学权威在制度边界内转移时必须考虑地方变异性的重要性,但这些结果表明,在政策背景下,科学权威的社会基础具有相当大的同质性。