Year: 2013

  • Becoming Tom Good

    Becoming Tom Good

    Research can do funny things to a Fellow. For example, I work on the food provisioning project as part of the Leverhulme programme. I am, therefore, interested in food beyond being concerned with what my dinner tonight will be. However, before this spring that interest did not extend to trying to grow my own food.…

  • Making the planet public

    Making the planet public

    I have always wanted to make a link between ISS – the Institute for Science and Society at the University of Nottingham – and ISS – the International Space Station – in OUTER SPACE. When looking yesterday at a picture of a cloud vortex taken by Commander Chris Hadfield from a window of the ISS,…

  • Families of climate scepticism I: faulty science?

    Families of climate scepticism I: faulty science?

    At last week’s British Sociological Association conference, I presented some initial observations from my research on climate change scepticism. My starting point was that climate change scepticism – or as it is often inaccurately described, denial – is not monolithic. Those people typically labelled as sceptics vary in their arguments. Sometimes may employ many different arguments, some may focus on…

  • Event: FREE screening of Kansas vs Darwin + Q+A with director Jeff Tamblyn

    Event: FREE screening of Kansas vs Darwin + Q+A with director Jeff Tamblyn

    In May we are very honoured to welcome US film director Jeff Tamblyn for screenings of his award-winning documentary, Kansas vs Darwin, followed by Q&A sessions with Jeff. The film tells an extraordinary story: This darkly comic documentary explores the epic 2005 Kansas state school board hearings, in which a group of creationist politicians attempted to…

  • Public understanding of climate change: The deficit fallacy

    Public understanding of climate change: The deficit fallacy

    At the end of February the House of Commons Science and Technology Select Committee launched an inquiry into public understanding of climate change and its implications for policy. The STSC asks for written submissions on various questions, such as: What is the current state of public understanding of what is meant by climate change? How…

  • Competitive risk promotion: A historical assessment

    Competitive risk promotion: A historical assessment

    This is a guest blog post by Adam Burgess, who specialises in the sociology of risk (University of Kent, School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research) I’d like to take up where Brigitte left off in her blog post about the antibiotic apocalypse and very schematically draw attention to what I would describe as…

  • When the mundane becomes threatening: Raising the alarm about antibiotic resistance

    When the mundane becomes threatening: Raising the alarm about antibiotic resistance

    I have recently written a blog post about the use of the word ‘alarmism’ in the context of current climate change debates, where the word is used to describe those who write and talk about an impending climate catastrophe. Today I want to write about another type of discourse that is alarming but has not…

  • Is there something dehumanising about science?

    Is there something dehumanising about science?

    At the recent launch of Making Science Public, the Rt. Rev Dr Lee Rayfield – a member of our programme’s advisory board and, as Bishop of Swindon and a trained medical scientist, the lead contact on science matters for the Church of England – participated in a late-afternoon panel. He posed an interesting question, which…