Making knowledge from below
This chapter engages with local, plural, and deliberative forms of knowledge and its potential for social innovation. Based on the premise that knowledge is co-produced with particular social orderings, knowledges that come ‘from below’ represent alternatives to and resistance against institutionally embedded knowledge ‘from above.’ We illustrate this with three cases. The first case offers a historical perspective by reassessing the knowledge and agricultural practices underlying resistance against Caribbean slave-based plantation economies. In the second case we present sheep farmers and veterinarians in Scotland who resisted a diagnostic information system for scabies imposed by the government. Farmers and veterinarians continued their effective local understanding and treatment practices of sheep scab. The third case introduces deliberations about future perspectives on social change that are implied in the introduction of genetically modified foods. The public engagement sessions revealed a variety of possible futures, contesting the narrow and negatively framed public attitude by mainstream science policy. We conclude by highlighting methodological implications of the cases, each showing particular epistemic and social connections as well as different forms of legitimation.
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Part of book or chapter of book biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Routledge
|
Subjects: | Life Science, |
Online Access: | https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/making-knowledge-from-below |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
id |
dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-588690 |
---|---|
record_format |
koha |
spelling |
dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5886902024-06-25 Middelveld, Senna Maat, Harro Macnaghten, Phil Part of book or chapter of book The Politics of Knowledge in Inclusive Development and Innovation ISBN: 9781003112525 Making knowledge from below 2021 This chapter engages with local, plural, and deliberative forms of knowledge and its potential for social innovation. Based on the premise that knowledge is co-produced with particular social orderings, knowledges that come ‘from below’ represent alternatives to and resistance against institutionally embedded knowledge ‘from above.’ We illustrate this with three cases. The first case offers a historical perspective by reassessing the knowledge and agricultural practices underlying resistance against Caribbean slave-based plantation economies. In the second case we present sheep farmers and veterinarians in Scotland who resisted a diagnostic information system for scabies imposed by the government. Farmers and veterinarians continued their effective local understanding and treatment practices of sheep scab. The third case introduces deliberations about future perspectives on social change that are implied in the introduction of genetically modified foods. The public engagement sessions revealed a variety of possible futures, contesting the narrow and negatively framed public attitude by mainstream science policy. We conclude by highlighting methodological implications of the cases, each showing particular epistemic and social connections as well as different forms of legitimation. en Routledge application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/making-knowledge-from-below 10.4324/9781003112525-4 https://edepot.wur.nl/556211 Life Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research |
institution |
WUR NL |
collection |
DSpace |
country |
Países bajos |
countrycode |
NL |
component |
Bibliográfico |
access |
En linea |
databasecode |
dig-wur-nl |
tag |
biblioteca |
region |
Europa del Oeste |
libraryname |
WUR Library Netherlands |
language |
English |
topic |
Life Science Life Science |
spellingShingle |
Life Science Life Science Middelveld, Senna Maat, Harro Macnaghten, Phil Making knowledge from below |
description |
This chapter engages with local, plural, and deliberative forms of knowledge and its potential for social innovation. Based on the premise that knowledge is co-produced with particular social orderings, knowledges that come ‘from below’ represent alternatives to and resistance against institutionally embedded knowledge ‘from above.’ We illustrate this with three cases. The first case offers a historical perspective by reassessing the knowledge and agricultural practices underlying resistance against Caribbean slave-based plantation economies. In the second case we present sheep farmers and veterinarians in Scotland who resisted a diagnostic information system for scabies imposed by the government. Farmers and veterinarians continued their effective local understanding and treatment practices of sheep scab. The third case introduces deliberations about future perspectives on social change that are implied in the introduction of genetically modified foods. The public engagement sessions revealed a variety of possible futures, contesting the narrow and negatively framed public attitude by mainstream science policy. We conclude by highlighting methodological implications of the cases, each showing particular epistemic and social connections as well as different forms of legitimation. |
format |
Part of book or chapter of book |
topic_facet |
Life Science |
author |
Middelveld, Senna Maat, Harro Macnaghten, Phil |
author_facet |
Middelveld, Senna Maat, Harro Macnaghten, Phil |
author_sort |
Middelveld, Senna |
title |
Making knowledge from below |
title_short |
Making knowledge from below |
title_full |
Making knowledge from below |
title_fullStr |
Making knowledge from below |
title_full_unstemmed |
Making knowledge from below |
title_sort |
making knowledge from below |
publisher |
Routledge |
url |
https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/making-knowledge-from-below |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT middelveldsenna makingknowledgefrombelow AT maatharro makingknowledgefrombelow AT macnaghtenphil makingknowledgefrombelow |
_version_ |
1813195165669523456 |