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    Refining Expertise: How Responsible Engineers Subvert Environmental Justice Challenges

    By Gwen Ottinger

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    About

    Winner of the 2015 Rachel Carson Prize presented by the Society for Social Studies of Science


    Residents
    of a small Louisiana town were sure that the oil refinery next door was
    making them sick. As part of a campaign demanding relocation away from the
    refinery, they collected scientific data to prove it. Their campaign ended with
    a settlement agreement that addressed many of their grievances—but not concerns
    about their health. Yet, instead of continuing to collect data, residents began
    to let refinery scientists' assertions that their operations did not
    harm them stand without challenge. What makes a community move
    so suddenly from actively challenging to apparently accepting experts'
    authority?


    Refining
    Expertise
    argues
    that the answer lies in the way that refinery scientists and engineers defined
    themselves as experts. Rather than claiming to be infallible, they began
    to portray themselves as responsible—committed to operating safely
    and to contributing to the well-being of the community. The volume shows
    that by grounding their claims to responsibility in influential ideas from
    the larger culture about what makes good citizens, nice communities, and moral
    companies, refinery scientists made it much harder for residents to challenge
    their expertise and thus re-established their authority over scientific
    questions related to the refinery's health and environmental effects.


    Gwen
    Ottinger here shows how industrial facilities' current approaches to
    dealing with concerned communities—approaches which leave much room for
    negotiation while shielding industry's environmental and health claims from
    critique—effectively undermine not only individual grassroots campaigns but
    also environmental justice activism and far-reaching efforts
    to democratize science. This work drives home the need for both activists
    and politically engaged scholars to reconfigure their own activities in
    response, in order to advance community health and robust scientific knowledge
    about it.

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