Participatory science communication needs to consider power, place, pain and ‘poisson’: a practitioner insight
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The language of science communication has moved from deficit to dialogue and talk of a ‘new social contract’ with the public ‘invited to participate’. This paper outlines a practitioner path that begins with storytelling and moves to a more participatory mode of practice of science communication for adaptation to climate change at the community scale. I outline personal practitioner reflections, specifically the need to consider issues of power, place, pain and the need to challenge assumptions. I propose the need to consider context, many forms of local knowledge and expertise, social learning, plus the pain of historical, contemporary or projected loss.
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Journal of Science Communication
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21
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2
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© The Author(s). This article is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution — NonCommercial — NoDerivativeWorks 4.0 License. Published by SISSA Medialab.
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Communication studies
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Leitch, A, Participatory science communication needs to consider power, place, pain and ‘poisson’: a practitioner insight, Journal of Science Communication, 2022, 21 (2), pp. N01