Bieszczad Sarah Rose, Fochler Maximilian, de Rijcke Sarah
Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Department of Science and Technology Studies, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Minerva. 2025;63(2):205-229. doi: 10.1007/s11024-025-09577-z. Epub 2025 Mar 25.
The deep sea is many things: a subject of both fascination and indifference; a realm of great unknowns and scientific inquiry; and a source of untapped potential and looming exploitation. Its multifaceted nature is also visible in scientific research on the deep sea. While traditional relevance narratives in the field of deep sea research centred around fundamental knowledge creation, calls for doing societally relevant research are intensifying. The field is currently in transition regarding its understanding of societally relevant research, as it has been criticised for failing to provide narratives that adequately demonstrate its societal relevance and the corresponding disconnect between its epistemic foci and the concerns of researchers, industry, and society more broadly. This transition is reverberating throughout ocean research institutions, prompting deep sea researchers to reconsider and re-articulate the relevance and applicability of their work. This article examines how deep sea researchers from two European ocean research institutes articulate the societal relevance of their work within their unique epistemic environments. Using a person-centred approach, we identify three ideal-type articulations of relevance: fundamental, translational, and solution-oriented. These articulations are shaped by financial, institutional, cultural, and media-related factors within the researchers' epistemic living spaces as well as their epistemic commitments to the creation of particular types of knowledge. Our findings reveal diverse understandings of societal relevance among deep sea researchers, even within single institutions. By focusing on these articulations, we frame relevance as an active process, highlighting the various actions researchers undertake to produce knowledge they perceive as relevant.
既是令人着迷又让人漠不关心的主题;是充满巨大未知与科学探索的领域;也是未开发潜力和迫在眉睫的开发源头。其多面性在深海科学研究中也可见一斑。虽然深海研究领域传统的相关性叙述以基础知识创造为核心,但开展具有社会相关性研究的呼声日益高涨。该领域目前在对社会相关性研究的理解上正处于转型期,因为它因未能提供充分证明其社会相关性的叙述,以及其认知焦点与研究人员、产业界及更广泛社会关注之间存在脱节而受到批评。这种转型在整个海洋研究机构中产生了反响,促使深海研究人员重新思考并重新阐述其工作的相关性和适用性。本文探讨了来自两个欧洲海洋研究机构的深海研究人员如何在其独特的认知环境中阐述其工作的社会相关性。我们采用以人为本的方法,确定了相关性的三种理想类型的阐述:基础型、转化型和面向解决方案型。这些阐述受到研究人员认知生活空间内与资金、机构、文化和媒体相关的因素,以及他们对特定类型知识创造的认知承诺的影响。我们的研究结果揭示了深海研究人员对社会相关性的多样理解,即使在单个机构内部也是如此。通过关注这些阐述,我们将相关性构建为一个积极的过程,突出了研究人员为产生他们认为相关的知识而采取的各种行动。