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    Negotiating Matters of Concern: Expertise, Uncertainty, and Agency in Rhetoric of Science

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    Date
    2018-05-01
    Author
    DeVasto, Danielle
    Department
    English
    Advisor(s)
    S. Scott Graham
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Debates over GMOs, vaccines, and climate change are but a few examples that highlight a growing body of high-stakes scientific controversies and the manifest difficulties inherent in communicating about them. Addressing these and similar issues requires navigating a wide array of competing scientific, technological, social, democratic, environmental, and economic exigencies. The development of scholarly approaches that can account for the complexity and dynamism of these cases is an essential part of ensuring effective, ethical interaction between scientists and publics. In this dissertation, I explore one such case, the L’Aquila earthquake controversy, in which seven technical experts were charged with manslaughter for failing to warn the public. With the addition of the trial, this earthquake overflowed the boundaries of seismology, entangling the public, political, and technical and foregrounding the specific challenges of public-expert communication about risk and uncertainty. To better account for and negotiate public-expert interaction, my dissertation develops rhetorically-oriented approaches for improving communication about risk and uncertainty. In so doing, I explore new synergies among three concepts – agency, expertise, and uncertainty – which have previously been treated separately by rhetoricians but are inextricably entangled in situations like L’Aquila.
    Subject
    earthquake
    matter of concern
    rhetoric of science
    risk communication
    science-policy
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91654
    Type
    dissertation
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    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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