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Cultural Coproduction of Four States of Knowledge
57
Citations
45
References
2011
Year
EducationSocial SciencesCultural DiversityScientific KnowledgeIndigenous GovernanceLocal KnowledgeCultural PatternTraditional Ecological KnowledgeCultural TransmissionSheila JasanoffCultural CoproductionPolicy ChangeCultureCultural ProcessCultural PracticesNatural SciencesIndigenous Knowledge SystemsEpistemologyAnthropologySocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
In States of Knowledge (2004), Sheila Jasanoff argues that we gain explanatory power by thinking of natural and social orders as being produced together, but she and her volume contributors do not yet offer a theory of the coproduction of scientific knowledge and social order. This article uses Mary Douglas’s cultural theory to identify four recurring states of knowledge and to specify political–cultural conditions for the coproduction of scientific knowledge, social order, and scientific, cultural, and policy change. The plausibility of this theory is illustrated by using it to explain the coproduction and transformation of forest and wildlife science and management in the Pacific Northwest.
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