TY - JOUR
T1 - A better knowledge is possible
T2 - Transforming environmental science for justice and pluralism
AU - Turnhout, Esther
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/5
Y1 - 2024/5
N2 - This article offers a critical analysis of environmental science that develops the argument that science has itself become an obstacle for the transformations that are needed to ensure human-ecological well-being. Due to dominant norms and conceptualizations of what science is, how it should relate to policy and society, and what it is that science should contribute to, environmental science is set to continue to serve vested interests and seems unable to break free from this pattern. This deadlock situation is related to persistent patterns of inequality and marginalization in science that keep these dominant norms and conceptualizations in place and that marginalize alternative forms of knowledge, including critical social sciences and humanities, that are better equipped to support transformation. Inspired by feminist and anti-colonial scholarship, I suggest that transforming environmental science will require explicit refusal of dominant norms of science and conceptualizations of the environment, and a commitment to justice and pluralism.
AB - This article offers a critical analysis of environmental science that develops the argument that science has itself become an obstacle for the transformations that are needed to ensure human-ecological well-being. Due to dominant norms and conceptualizations of what science is, how it should relate to policy and society, and what it is that science should contribute to, environmental science is set to continue to serve vested interests and seems unable to break free from this pattern. This deadlock situation is related to persistent patterns of inequality and marginalization in science that keep these dominant norms and conceptualizations in place and that marginalize alternative forms of knowledge, including critical social sciences and humanities, that are better equipped to support transformation. Inspired by feminist and anti-colonial scholarship, I suggest that transforming environmental science will require explicit refusal of dominant norms of science and conceptualizations of the environment, and a commitment to justice and pluralism.
KW - UT-Hybrid-D
KW - Decolonisation
KW - Power
KW - Science and technology studies
KW - Science-policy interface
KW - Transformative change
KW - Co-production
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85187973705&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.envsci.2024.103729
DO - 10.1016/j.envsci.2024.103729
M3 - Short survey
AN - SCOPUS:85187973705
SN - 1462-9011
VL - 155
JO - Environmental Science and Policy
JF - Environmental Science and Policy
M1 - 103729
ER -