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dc.contributor.authorPiña Romero, Julieta
dc.contributor.authorReyes Galindo, Luis
dc.contributor.authorVallejo Novoa, Leopoldo Arturo
dc.date.accessioned2023-06-06T22:50:32Z
dc.date.available2023-06-06T22:50:32Z
dc.date.issued2022-11-21
dc.identifier.citationJulieta Piña-Romero, Luis Reyes-Galindo & L. Arturo Vallejo Novoa (2022) Citizen science in Latin America and the Global South, Part 1, Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society, 5:1, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/25729861.2022.2145040es_MX
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1080/25729861.2022.2145040
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11285/650830
dc.description.abstract‘Citizen science’ has become an umbrella term for a growing number of projects that introduce laypersons into the heartlands of science-making, and an extension of calls for increasing science ‘democratisation’ and ‘engagement.’ Engagement, and therefore citizen science, may be classified according to its varying degree of institutionalisation (Invernizzi 2020) Top-down approaches which strongly demarcate what laypersons may and should do within scientific projects (e.g. pre-framed data gathering and sorting). Cooperative or counter-hegemonic interactions in which laypersons-institution interaction occurs on more level epistemic terms (e.g. NGO-led science, patient-group data gathering) Science ‘on the margins’, where science and knowledge are created and live out independently from institutions. This special cluster aims to reflexively explore projects of citizen science in Latin America and the Global South, particularly in the first two modes, i.e. when layperson-institutional interaction is a critical component of engagement. We invite papers that include but are not limited to sociological, anthropological or historical case studies; philosophical reflections on epistemological, ontological, cultural, geopolitical and ethical questions raised by citizen science; and discussions on the role that citizen science can play in science policy—including the wide range of diversely-democratic and participatory conceptualisations of science-society relations found in the Global South. Project management and infrastructure-related articles that fully engage with STS topics are also encouraged.es_MX
dc.format.mediumTextoes_MX
dc.language.isoenges_MX
dc.relation.isFormatOfpublishedVersiones_MX
dc.rightsopenAccesses_MX
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0es_MX
dc.subjectINGENIERÍA Y TECNOLOGÍAes_MX
dc.subject.lcshTechnologyes_MX
dc.titleCitizen science in Latin America and the global south, part 1es_MX
dc.typeArtículo/Articlees_MX
dc.identifier.journalTapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Societyes_MX
dc.identifier.orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-2420-0969es_MX
dc.subject.keywordCitizen sciencees_MX
dc.subject.keywordGlobal Southes_MX
dc.subject.keywordLatin Americaes_MX
dc.subject.keywordScience-Technology Studieses_MX
dc.identifier.volume5es_MX
dc.identifier.issue1es_MX
dc.identifier.startpage1es_MX
dc.identifier.endpage5es_MX
dc.contributor.affiliationTecnológico de Monterreyes_MX
dc.contributor.affiliationENES Moreliaes_MX
dc.contributor.affiliationWageningen Universityes_MX
dc.contributor.affiliationhttps://ror.org/03ayjn504es_MX
dc.contributor.affiliationhttps://ror.org/04qw24q55es_MX
dc.subject.countryReino Unido / United Kingdomes_MX
dc.identifier.cvu180319es_MX
dc.identificator7es_MX


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