1. Uncertainty and the Politics of Transformation (Ian Scoones and Andy Stirling) 2. The Assault of Financial Futures on the Rest of Time (Timo Walter and Leon Wansleben) 3. Sharing Risks or Proliferating Uncertainties? Insurance, Disaster and Development (Leigh Johnson) 4. The Unravelling of Technocratic Orthodoxy? Contemporary Knowledge Politics in Technology Regulation (Patrick van Zwanenberg) 5. Control, Manage or Cope? A Politics for Risks, Uncertainties and Unknown-Unknowns (Emery Roe) 6. Expanding Cities: Living, Planning and Governing Uncertainty (Matthew Cook, Federico Cugurullo, James Evans, Sobia Ahmad Kaker and Saska Petrova) 7. Uncertainty in Modelling Climate Change: The Possibilities of Co-production Through Knowledge Pluralism (Lyla Mehta and Shilpi Srivastava) 8. Disease Outbreaks: Navigating Uncertainties in Preparedness and Response (Hayley MacGregor, Santiago Ripoll and Melissa Leach) 9. Disasters, Humanitarianism and Emergencies: A Politics of Uncertainty (Mark Pelling, Detlef Mueller-Mahn and John McCloskey) 10. Intertwining the Politics of Uncertainty, Mobility and Immobility (Dorte Thorsen) 11. Disputing Security and Risk: The Convoluted Politics of Uncertainty (Helena Farrand Carrapico, Narzanin Massoumi, William McGowan and Gabe Mythen) 12. Unsettling the Apocalypse: Uncertainty in Spirituality and Religion (Nathan Oxley)
Ian Scoones is a professor at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex and is co-director of the ESRC STEPS Centre.
Andy Stirling is a professor at the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex and is co-director of the ESRC STEPS Centre.
"This collection fills an important gap in our understanding of the
role of uncertainty in the science-society nexus. It illustrates
the growing awareness that, in this context, uncertainty is
essentially a political concern to be addressed by better
governance rather than a scientific problem to be solved by
improved techniques. Scientific uncertainty will continue to be a
challenge for contemporary societies as long as the legitimacy of
policy decision-making and action is based on trust in science." –
Professor Silvio Funtowicz, Centre for the Study of the Sciences
and the Humanities, University of Bergen; formerly EU Joint
Research Centre, Ispra"What should we do with uncertainty? Not
abolish it with facts, this wide-ranging essay collection argues.
Introduced by two of our most incisive analysts of alternative
social futures, the book delves into today’s most significant
governance challenges and shows how uncertainty leads us to
reimagine the politics of modernity. In these turbulent times, this
is a book to read, savor and read again." – Professor Sheila
Jasanoff, Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies
at the Harvard Kennedy School"The old world order is fading into
history: what a new one will look like is currently uncertain. In
fields as diverse as climate change, finance, urban futures,
pandemics, mass migration and many more, the future looks less
predictable and demands alternative approaches. This well-timed
book lays out what they might be." – Professor Dipak Gyawali,
Academician, Academy of Science and Technology, Kathmandu; formerly
Nepali Minister of Water Resources "The Politics of Uncertainty
questions the framing of uncertainty that has largely been
transformed into calculable risks. Across a wide spectrum ranging
from finance and banking to practices of modelling disease and
climate change, the authors highlight the failings of institutions
of illusionary control. Their urgent appeal deserves to be widely
heard: by embracing uncertainty a culture of care can emerge,
paving the way towards sustainability" – Emeritus Professor Dr.
Helga Nowotny, Chair of the ERA Council Forum, Austria; former
President of the European Research Council"Our world is deeply
uncertain. Yet the concept is barely understood. This extraordinary
volume brings together a cross-disciplinary, international group of
thinkers on the leading edge of thinking about incertitude. The
book’s essays challenge us to recognize the unique risks and, more
radically, the emancipatory opportunities associated with what can
not be known or domesticated." – Professor Ilene Grabel,
Distinguished Professor of International Finance, Josef Korbel
School of International Studies, University of Denver; author of
multiple prize-winning book, ‘When Things Don’t Fall Apart’, MIT
Press. "That even the best of global scientific knowledge and
attendant policy cultures are always beset with contingency and
ignorance has been a long and unfinished learning struggle. That
this recognition is vital for practical effect in the development
of sustainable and just human democratic futures has seen even
stronger resistance, or denial. This collection integrates leading
insights on the diverse, evolving challenges presented by these
persistent conditions – a truly unique resource." – Emeritus
Professor Brian Wynne, Centre for the Study of Environment Change,
University of Lancaster; former special advisor to the House of
Lords and Royal Society on science in society"While risk and
uncertainty are often described in technocratic ways that create
fear or the feeling of being overwhelmed by complexity, the book
offers us a new way to reimagine how society can engage with
uncertainty in an open way that prioritises alternative visions,
questions the sources of data and the direction of science, debates
the distribution of benefits, and opens the possibility of
participation and experimentation along the way. It could not come
at a better time." –Professor Mariana Mazzucato, Founding Director,
Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, University College
London; winner of 2014 New Statesman SPERI Prize, 2015
Hans-Matthöfer-Preis and 2018 Leontief Prize
"This collection fills an important gap in our understanding of the
role of uncertainty in the science-society nexus. It illustrates
the growing awareness that, in this context, uncertainty is
essentially a political concern to be addressed by better
governance rather than a scientific problem to be solved by
improved techniques. Scientific uncertainty will continue to be a
challenge for contemporary societies as long as the legitimacy of
policy decision-making and action is based on trust in science."
Professor Silvio Funtowicz, Centre for the Study of the Sciences
and the Humanities, University of Bergen; formerly EU Joint
Research Centre, Ispra"What should we do with uncertainty? Not
abolish it with facts, this wide-ranging essay collection argues.
Introduced by two of our most incisive analysts of alternative
social futures, the book delves into today’s most significant
governance challenges and shows how uncertainty leads us to
reimagine the politics of modernity. In these turbulent times, this
is a book to read, savor and read again." Professor Sheila
Jasanoff, Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies
at the Harvard Kennedy School"The old world order is fading into
history: what a new one will look like is currently uncertain. In
fields as diverse as climate change, finance, urban futures,
pandemics, mass migration and many more, the future looks less
predictable and demands alternative approaches. This well-timed
book lays out what they might be." Professor Dipak Gyawali,
Academician, Academy of Science and Technology, Kathmandu; formerly
Nepali Minister of Water Resources "The Politics of Uncertainty
questions the framing of uncertainty that has largely been
transformed into calculable risks. Across a wide spectrum ranging
from finance and banking to practices of modelling disease and
climate change, the authors highlight the failings of institutions
of illusionary control. Their urgent appeal deserves to be widely
heard: by embracing uncertainty a culture of care can emerge,
paving the way towards sustainability"Emeritus Professor Dr. Helga
Nowotny, Chair of the ERA Council Forum, Austria; former President
of the European Research Council"Our world is deeply uncertain. Yet
the concept is barely understood. This extraordinary volume brings
together a cross-disciplinary, international group of thinkers on
the leading edge of thinking about incertitude. The book’s essays
challenge us to recognize the unique risks and, more radically, the
emancipatory opportunities associated with what can not be known or
domesticated." Professor Ilene Grabel, Distinguished Professor of
International Finance, Josef Korbel School of International
Studies, University of Denver; author of multiple prize-winning
book, ‘When Things Don’t Fall Apart’, MIT Press. "That even the
best of global scientific knowledge and attendant policy cultures
are always beset with contingency and ignorance has been a long and
unfinished learning struggle. That this recognition is vital for
practical effect in the development of sustainable and just human
democratic futures has seen even stronger resistance, or denial.
This collection integrates leading insights on the diverse,
evolving challenges presented by these persistent conditions – a
truly unique resource." Emeritus Professor Brian Wynne, Centre for
the Study of Environment Change, University of Lancaster; former
special advisor to the House of Lords and Royal Society on science
in society"While risk and uncertainty are often described in
technocratic ways that create fear or the feeling of being
overwhelmed by complexity, the book offers us a new way to
reimagine how society can engage with uncertainty in an open way
that prioritises alternative visions, questions the sources of data
and the direction of science, debates the distribution of benefits,
and opens the possibility of participation and experimentation
along the way. It could not come at a better time." Professor
Mariana Mazzucato, Founding Director, Institute for Innovation and
Public Purpose, University College London; winner of 2014 New
Statesman SPERI Prize, 2015 Hans-Matthöfer-Preis and 2018 Leontief
Prize
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