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Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public.

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Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public. / Levitt, Mairi; Weiner, Kate; Goodacre, John.
In: Public Understanding of Science, Vol. 14, No. 1, 01.2005, p. 67-79.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Levitt, M, Weiner, K & Goodacre, J 2005, 'Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public.', Public Understanding of Science, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 67-79. https://doi.org/10.1177/0963662505047824

APA

Vancouver

Levitt M, Weiner K, Goodacre J. Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public. Public Understanding of Science. 2005 Jan;14(1):67-79. doi: 10.1177/0963662505047824

Author

Levitt, Mairi ; Weiner, Kate ; Goodacre, John. / Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public. In: Public Understanding of Science. 2005 ; Vol. 14, No. 1. pp. 67-79.

Bibtex

@article{c51f642bfafc4a81b5955f723ee02e07,
title = "Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public.",
abstract = "Within academic circles, the “deficit” model of public understanding of science has been subject to increasing critical scrutiny by those who favor more constructivist approaches. These suggest that “the public” can articulate sophisticated ideas about the social and ethical implications of science regardless of their level of technical knowledge. The seminal studies following constructivist approaches have generally involved small-scale qualitative investigations, which have minimized the pre-framing of issues to a greater or lesser extent. This article describes the Gene Week Project, sponsored by the Wellcome Trust, which attempted to extend this work to a large-scale consultation on genetics and health through the medium of a local daily newspaper. Readers were invited to respond to a set of open-ended questions that accompanied stimulus material published each day for five consecutive weekdays. The articles were written with the intention of extending the limited range of discourses around genetics and biotechnology that are usually presented by the popular media (hope, fear, tragedy and bravery). Responses raised overarching issues about the place of emerging health technologies in society reminiscent of previous open-ended consultations in this field. The paper ends with a critical discussion about the potential of this method to contribute to the further development of open-ended public consultations.",
author = "Mairi Levitt and Kate Weiner and John Goodacre",
year = "2005",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1177/0963662505047824",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "67--79",
journal = "Public Understanding of Science",
issn = "1361-6609",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gene week: a novel way of consulting the public.

AU - Levitt, Mairi

AU - Weiner, Kate

AU - Goodacre, John

PY - 2005/1

Y1 - 2005/1

N2 - Within academic circles, the “deficit” model of public understanding of science has been subject to increasing critical scrutiny by those who favor more constructivist approaches. These suggest that “the public” can articulate sophisticated ideas about the social and ethical implications of science regardless of their level of technical knowledge. The seminal studies following constructivist approaches have generally involved small-scale qualitative investigations, which have minimized the pre-framing of issues to a greater or lesser extent. This article describes the Gene Week Project, sponsored by the Wellcome Trust, which attempted to extend this work to a large-scale consultation on genetics and health through the medium of a local daily newspaper. Readers were invited to respond to a set of open-ended questions that accompanied stimulus material published each day for five consecutive weekdays. The articles were written with the intention of extending the limited range of discourses around genetics and biotechnology that are usually presented by the popular media (hope, fear, tragedy and bravery). Responses raised overarching issues about the place of emerging health technologies in society reminiscent of previous open-ended consultations in this field. The paper ends with a critical discussion about the potential of this method to contribute to the further development of open-ended public consultations.

AB - Within academic circles, the “deficit” model of public understanding of science has been subject to increasing critical scrutiny by those who favor more constructivist approaches. These suggest that “the public” can articulate sophisticated ideas about the social and ethical implications of science regardless of their level of technical knowledge. The seminal studies following constructivist approaches have generally involved small-scale qualitative investigations, which have minimized the pre-framing of issues to a greater or lesser extent. This article describes the Gene Week Project, sponsored by the Wellcome Trust, which attempted to extend this work to a large-scale consultation on genetics and health through the medium of a local daily newspaper. Readers were invited to respond to a set of open-ended questions that accompanied stimulus material published each day for five consecutive weekdays. The articles were written with the intention of extending the limited range of discourses around genetics and biotechnology that are usually presented by the popular media (hope, fear, tragedy and bravery). Responses raised overarching issues about the place of emerging health technologies in society reminiscent of previous open-ended consultations in this field. The paper ends with a critical discussion about the potential of this method to contribute to the further development of open-ended public consultations.

U2 - 10.1177/0963662505047824

DO - 10.1177/0963662505047824

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 67

EP - 79

JO - Public Understanding of Science

JF - Public Understanding of Science

SN - 1361-6609

IS - 1

ER -