The significance of public relationships with scientific and medical expertise has
increasingly been highlighted as an area of importance in governmental policy formulation
and scientific activities. Central to this relationship has been the role of the media,
frequently depicted as increasing the strained communications between science, medicine
and the public in the present UK 'crisis' of expertise.
Sociological research has contributed to our understandings of science, medicine, the
media and lay knowledge. The research presented in this thesis correlates these
contributions. It focuses on 'new genetics' to elicit the views towards communication and
understanding expressed by three groups; media professionals, members of the public and
medical and scientific experts. Utilising a range of quantitative and qualitative methods,
this research reflects on the relationships and identities created during interactions between
these three groups, ignored by prior studies that have frequently focused on one or two
participants in such relationships.
This thesis contributes to present debates surrounding the role of the media and public,
concluding that the present climate for dialogue is a politically motivated, theoretical
context, challenged by a lack of practical methods to confront long-held notions of
understanding and communication between expertise and lay persons. This offers original
insight into the identities members of the media, public and scientific and medical experts
create, maintain and displace in their interactions. The 'crisis' in science and trust instead
comes 10 represent a manufactured perception of the public and media, which continues to
exclude the public from true dialogue with medical and scientific experts and maintains
traditional notions of the media as incompetent.
Date of Award | 2004 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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MULTIPLE EXPERTS: SCIENTIFIC, MEDICAL, MEDIA AND LAY DISCOURSES ON 'NEW GENETICS'
WILKINSON, C. E. (Author). 2004
Student thesis: PhD