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2018 Conference

June 20–23, 2018

Washington, DC

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Our identity and engagement beyond the laboratory: exploring scholar advocacy during the March for Science and People’s Climate March

Thursday, June 21, 2018 at 12:15 PM–2:00 PM EDT
Commons (Poster Sessions)
Type of Session

Poster Presentation

Abstract

Tensions about the possibility and desirability of academic scholars’ traditional role as objective, disinterested knowledge providers in the face of public policy challenges such as climate change have emerged in a range of contexts. Interestingly, it is no longer single, rogue scholars who are expressing interest in shifting the role of science in public engagement. Individual and institutional calls for research to extend beyond the laboratory suggest that the social contract for research is changing. However, despite arguments for and against scholar advocacy, there has been little investigation of the extent to which scholars’ occupational identities are shifting.

Political advocacy from scholars takes multiple forms, but physical participation in public protests is a highly visible embodiment of this. Climate change has spurred an especially vibrant debate about the appropriate role of scholars. Shortly following Donald Trump’s inauguration, the March for Science and People’s Climate March took place one week apart in Washington DC during April 2017. Using on-the-spot interviews (n=325) and post-march surveys (n=331), this study investigates the extent to which participation in public protests is perceived as part of scholars’ occupational role. Participants were asked questions exploring their rationales for engagement, the extent to which they self-perceive this engagement to be part of their occupation, and their intentions for marching. Nearly two-thirds of respondents believe that scholars should engage in direct political protest or activism. Meanwhile more than one-third of participants—including scholars and non-scholars—indicated that they participated in the march as part of their occupation. These results suggest that while the role of scholars in advocacy may be shifting, examining only scholar-activism may be missing the potential that public policy issues such as climate change have in shifting occupational identities more generally.

Primary Contact

Jeffrey Swofford, Arizona State University

Presenters

Jeffrey Swofford, jeffrey.swofford@asu.edu

Co-Authors

Chair, Facilitator, Or Moderators

Discussants

Workshop Leaders

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