Journal article
From inequalities to epistemic innovation: Insights from open science hardware projects in Latin America
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, v 150, 103576
Dec 2023
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
Literature in environmental science has documented understudied regions, topics, and the underrepresentation of specific groups in the discipline, with significant consequences for research, policy and advocacy. Understanding inequality as a representation problem is valuable but does not necessarily unpack its mechanisms. Using an epistemic justice lens, I look at scientific instruments as sites of inequality by design in environmental studies. Even when in recent years we have seen an explosion of new scientific tools in the field, how these tools reproduce inequalities is underexplored. The open science hardware movement provides an opportunity for studying this question in practice. I present findings from qualitative research with two projects of the Gathering for Open Science Hardware (GOSH) community in Latin America during 2018-2022. These findings show how researchers use open science hardware to overcome structural inequalities in environmental research. Beyond their lower cost, researchers are using open hardware to enable new ideas and concepts to emerge through flexible and repairable designs. I describe four mechanisms that enable the creation of new epistemic resources: autonomy, flexibility, impact and resilience, and I identify significant limitations to this potential. In the context of ongoing policy discussions promoting wider adoption of low-cost environmental research tools, this work provides insights for seizing the transformative potential of openness towards more fair environmental science.
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Details
- Title
- From inequalities to epistemic innovation: Insights from open science hardware projects in Latin America
- Publication Details
- ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, v 150, 103576
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCI LTD; OXFORD
- Grant note
- I am deeply thankful for the time, patience, trust and insights that the members of the Gorgas project and the Open Agroecology Lab, and overall the Global Open Science Hardware community, have shared with me in these years. I also would like to thank the three reviewers who provided very useful comments that improved this manuscript, and Gwen Ottinger for her generous reviews and comments throughout the writing process. This work was funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, grant number 2020-14078.
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Drexel University
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:001097154400001
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-85171464886
- Other Identifier
- 991021860735504721
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- Web of Science research areas
- Environmental Sciences