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Special Themes:
- Educating social scientists today.
- Social sciences in the universities under transformation.
- Social sciences/humanities/natural sciences: new rules of delimitation.
- Social problems and social issues in postmodernity: the end of social theory?
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Theme 1: The Social Impacts of Science
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- Applied and basic science: what are the connections?
- From science to technology: concepts, methods, practices.
- Design practices: putting science to work.
- Science in the service of the social: the processes of problem definition and problem solving.
- Science that changes the world: how do we address the key challenges of our times - sustainability, climate change, health, poverty?
- Social-systematic biases in science? Gender, class, race, ethnicity and disability in science.
- The natural-physical and the social: what is the distinction?
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Theme 2: The Values, Ethos and Ethics of Science
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- What are the core values of science?
- Socially engaged, responsible, accountable science.
- The ethics of science and the values of scientists.
- Academic freedom, research integrity and social responsibility.
- Specific ethical issues: bioethics, medical ethics, environmental ethics.
- Human and animal subjects in scientific research.
- Science and religion.
- Diversity in science: negotiating paradigms and ideological divergence.
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Theme 3: The Pedagogies of Science
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- Science at school: how children learn the values, practices and content knowledge of science.
- Education and miseducation: controversies and ‘balance’ in science curricula.
- Science apprenticeships: technical, professional, university and postgraduate education in science.
- Community education in science: connecting lay and expert discourses through the media, museums and the public culture.
- Science learning and teaching in popular media.
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Theme 4: The Knowledge Systems of Science
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- Social perspective and objectivity in science.
- Communicating discovery: publishing in the scientific community.
- The social moderation and validation of science: changing systems and processes of peer review.
- The globalisation of science.
- Scientific paradigms and social ideologies.
- Indigenous, traditional and popular science.
- The social in science work: teams, collaborations, disciplinary and cross-disciplinary groupings.
- Sites of scientific work: new and emerging sites of knowledge production.
- Modes of knowledge dissemination: traditional, electronic and open access publication channels.
- Modes of knowledge synthesis: data mining, disaggregation and reaggregation.
- User-focused science and participatory research.
- Interdisciplinary practices across social and physical sciences.
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Theme 5: The Politics of Science
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- Government in science: policy, politics, lobbying, funding.
- Public accountability for science: why, how and to what effect?
- Who are the stakeholders of science?
- Public communication of science.
- Science and ‘controversy’: politics and ideology in ‘truth’ claims.
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Theme 6: The Economics of Science
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- Returns on public investment in science.
- Science in the ‘knowledge economy’.
- Science and ‘innovation’.
- National competitiveness and scientific league tables.
- Measuring scientific outputs.
- Selling science: markets for scientific knowledge.
- Private science: science as a business.
- Intellectual capital: measuring the value of science.