Beschreibung
Modern politics is highly science-dependent and knowledge-driven. What is the rightful role of expert knowledge in political life? How can the truth claims of science be reconciled with principles of democratic control and lay participatory rights in decision-making?
This collection of essays by political scientists, sociologists and economists from Germany, France and Norway provides different empirical and theoretical analyses of the complex organising and legitimising power of knowledge in political governance. The authors shed light on key dimensions and dilemmas that have shaped the world-changing interrelations between politics, social institutions and scientific knowledge in the past century.
The contributions cover issue-areas and policy-fields such as population control, health economics, ICTs and higher education reform, and the politics of productivity and economic pre-eminence.
Autorenportrait
Linda Sangolt, Associate Professor in the Department of Administration and Organization Theory at the University of Bergen, has research interests and publications in knowledge management, political theory and European integration.
Inhalt
Contents: Linda Sangolt: Introduction. The Elusive Quest for Epistemic Certainty – Peter Wagner: Epistemic Certainty Questioned. On Science Wars and Scientific Revolutions – Ole Jacob Sending: From Order to Governmental Rationalities? Population Policies and the Formation of Global Knowledge Regimes – Linda Sangolt: A Century of Quantification and «Cold Calculation.» Trends in the Pursuit of Efficiency, Growth and Pre-eminence – Alain Desrosières: A Politics of Knowledge-tools. The Case of Statistics – Bettina Wiström: Is it Healthy to Measure? A Systematic Analogy between Harsanyi’s Social Choice Theory and the Standard Gamble. Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALY) – Gunnar Guddal Michelsen: Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and the Transformation of the University. Inhaltsverzeichnis