Article ID: CBB240395704

When citizen science is public relations (October 2021)

unapi

Amid rising interest in participatory research, some industries have recently begun to practice public relations citizen science (PRCS). Unlike citizen science and crowdsourcing projects that generate raw materials for product development, PRCS benefits capitalist firms primarily by improving their public image and deflecting accusations of causing harm. Three cases illustrate how PRCS works: (1) a growing assortment of citizen science projects associated with Antarctic tourism, (2) an initiative to document biodiversity, linked to Canada’s oil and gas industry, and (3) a study sponsored by Biology Fortified, a nonprofit organization that works to communicate positive information about agricultural biotechnology. Scientists and research organizations may have legitimate reasons for entering into these partnerships, but PRCS can benefit industries in problematic ways. First, by supporting environmental science, PRCS can attach a ‘sustainable’ image to a polluting industry, without changing its core practices. Second, PRCS can accumulate data and steer volunteers’ observations in ways that undermine claims about the harms caused by the industry’s practices or products. Finally, in some cases, PRCS organizers hope to induce people to view an industry more ‘rationally’ than those who make ‘emotional’ or ‘ideological’ claims about its harms.

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Authors & Contributors
Allen, Barbara L.
Charvolin, Florian
Kearnes, Matthew B.
Liu, Dun
Lo, Yin-Yueh
Peters, Hans Peter
Journals
Science, Technology, and Human Values
Social Studies of Science
Science as Culture
Business History Review
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
Ziran Kexueshi Yanjiu (Studies in the History of Natural Sciences)
Publishers
Mimesis
Random House
University of Chicago Press
University of Washington Press
Concepts
Science and society
Science and technology studies (STS)
Citizen science; community science
Pollution
Participation
Public relations
People
Kerr, Roy Patrick
Nachtsheim, Hans
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
Places
France
United States
Taiwan
Europe
Germany
Italy
Institutions
Du Pont Company
ENI (Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi)
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