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.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB240395704/

Similar Citations

Article Adam Rome; (Spring 2019)
DuPont and the Limits of Corporate Environmentalism (/isis/citation/CBB084779699/)

Article Petra Benyei; Manuel Pardo-de-Santayana; Laura Aceituno-Mata; Laura Calvet-Mir; María Carrascosa-García; Marta Rivera-Ferre; Antonio Perdomo-Molina; Victoria Reyes-García; (July 2021)
Participation in Citizen Science: Insights from the CONECT-e Case Study (/isis/citation/CBB840403823/)

Article Courtney Addison; Hallam Stevens; (May 2022)
Crowdfunding Conservation Science: Tracing the Participatory Dynamics of Native Parrot Genome Sequencing (/isis/citation/CBB774118711/)

Article Christelle Gramaglia; François Mélard; (2019)
Looking for the Cosmopolitical Fish: Monitoring Marine Pollution with Anglers and Congers in the Gulf of Fos, Southern France (/isis/citation/CBB276214571/)

Article Cook, Brian R.; Kesby, Mike; Fazey, Ioan; Spray, Chris; (October 2013)
The persistence of ‘normal’ catchment management despite the participatory turn: Exploring the power effects of competing frames of reference (/isis/citation/CBB350967664/)

Article Aaron Panofsky; Joan Donovan; (October 2019)
Genetic ancestry testing among white nationalists: From identity repair to citizen science (/isis/citation/CBB869271385/)

Article Steven B. Emery; Hank A. J. Mulder; Lynn J. Frewer; (May 2015)
Maximizing the Policy Impacts of Public Engagement: A European Study (/isis/citation/CBB079889535/)

Book Christopher W. Wells; (2018)
Environmental Justice in Postwar America: A Documentary Reader (/isis/citation/CBB614616258/)

Book Theodor Seuss Geisel; (2001)
The Lorax: [50th Anniversary Edition] (/isis/citation/CBB689612311/)

Book Rachel Emma Rothschild; (2019)
Poisonous Skies: Acid Rain and the Globalization of Pollution (/isis/citation/CBB725120545/)

Article Chris Hesselbein; (2023)
Kickstarting science? Crowdfunded research, public engagement, and the participatory condition (/isis/citation/CBB886006696/)

Article Barbara L. Allen; (November 2018)
Strongly Participatory Science and Knowledge Justice in an Environmentally Contested Region (/isis/citation/CBB069762669/)

Article Lo, Yin Yueh; Huang, Chun-Ju; Peters, Hans Peter; (December 2019)
Do Organizational Interests Interfere with Public Communication of Science? An Explorative Study of Public Relations of Scientific Organizations in Taiwan (/isis/citation/CBB566958394/)

Article You, Zhanhong; Liu, Dun; (2005)
On the Early Experience of the Pugwash Movement and Its Significance (/isis/citation/CBB000630895/)

Article Palmira Fontes da Costa; (2022)
Gender and botany in early nineteenth-century Portugal: The circle of the Marquise of Alorna (/isis/citation/CBB087814611/)

Article Ruha Benjamin; (November 2016)
Informed Refusal: Toward a Justice-based Bioethics (/isis/citation/CBB856025239/)

Article Laursen, Ditte; (February 2013)
Co-participation among school children around a computer-based exhibit (/isis/citation/CBB923238562/)

Article Papadopoulos, Dimitris; (April 2011)
Alter-ontologies: Towards a constituent politics in technoscience (/isis/citation/CBB185760393/)

Article Jacobson, Arne; Kammen, Daniel; (Winter 2005)
Science and Engineering Research That Values the Planet (/isis/citation/CBB337716604/)

Authors & Contributors
Frewer, Lynn J.
Frescani, Elio
Petra Benyei
Theodor Seuss Geisel
Spray, Chris
Donovan, Joan
Concepts
Science and society
Participation
Technoscience; science and technology studies
Citizen science; community science
Pollution
Public relations
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
19th century
Places
France
Puerto Rico
United States
Portugal
New Zealand
Italy
Institutions
ENI (Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi)
Du Pont Company
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment