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Coercion, Consent and Contestation in Scientific Practices in India

Thu, August 30, 2:00 to 3:30pm, ICC, E3.9

Abstract

The advent of the customer-funder-policymaker as a prominent element in scientific practice since mid-1990s in India and intensifying thereafter seems to have forced scientists to (re)negotiate scientific boundaries and to do some of the delicate boundary work. The challenge for scientists is to bring science “close enough” to politics and policy demonstrating social accountability, legitimacy and relevance, but to avoid either science or politics overextending into the other’s territory – a prospect that is evidently disorienting and poses serious threats to idealized identities of science and the scientific community. Against this backdrop, the main objective of the study is to examine the factors responsible for the shift in the practice of science from being a curiosity-driven activity to contract obligations. Through the radical changes in science funding and policy-orientation in India since mid-1990s, scientists seem to be vigorously mapping out the cultural spaces for science and for their own identities as forming the scientific community. In this context, scientists included in the study are not actually in the process of (re)classifying a satisfactory version of “science” and “policy” through their work. Instead, they are engaged in multiple versions actively negotiated science – policy boundaries, many of which seem to have different qualities and make different demands on them as researchers/scientists.

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