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    Agents of Change: Scholarly Intervention at the Science-Policy Nexus

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    Date
    2018-05-01
    Author
    Card, Daniel
    Department
    English
    Advisor(s)
    S. Scott Graham
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    This dissertation examines an emerging “engaged rhetoric of science, technology, and medicine” (ERSTM)—an effort to ensure rhetoric’s “broader impacts” by more directly engaging the practices of science and sociotechnical policymaking. Through careful analysis of engaged rhetorical practice, I identify divergent conceptualizations of both rhetoric and engagement and subsequently draw on new materialist rhetorical theory and empirical research on science communication and public engagement to advance “problem-oriented rhetorical catalysis” (PRC) as a mode of engagement capable of advancing rhetoric’s institutional value and ethical commitments without abandoning its core disciplinary expertise and areas of inquiry. I further suggest the PRC is uniquely suited to address “wicked problems” and as such represents a productive alternative to deficit- and transmission-model engagement.
    Subject
    Decisionmaking
    Engagement
    Policymaking
    Rhetoric of Science
    Science Communication
    Wicked Problems
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91636
    Type
    dissertation
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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