This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"? We use the ...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
30 CURRENT | liz |
March 01, 2022 18:34
| almost 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You might start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement. A community science project will likely pass through many phases nonlinearly—problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, as well as organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. The trigger moment may occur in any of these phases, some phases may loop again and again, some may be skipped. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The model of what we began calling "community science" in 2013 was first put into action in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that standards for evidence in regulatory science become a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Earlier definitionsOur first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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29 | liz |
February 23, 2022 18:51
| almost 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You might start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement. A community science project will likely pass through many phases nonlinearly—problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, as well as organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. The trigger moment may occur in any of these phases, some phases may loop again and again, some may be skipped. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that standards for evidence in regulatory science become a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Earlier definitionsOur first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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28 | liz |
February 17, 2022 21:12
| almost 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You might start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that standards for evidence in regulatory science become a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Earlier definitionsOur first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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27 | liz |
November 05, 2021 20:59
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that standards for evidence in regulatory science become a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Earlier definitionsOur first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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26 | liz |
October 13, 2021 20:51
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that regulatory science becomes a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Earlier definitionsOur first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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25 | liz |
October 13, 2021 01:13
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineagePublic Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination. See https://publiclab.org/organizing for more. This timeline sketch loosely mentions some moments in locally-led knowledge production and the technology required to support it, which together can support the pursuit of community self-determination and recovery from colonial, enslaving, industrial, and economic trauma to human-environment relationships:
HistoricalOn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as "a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action" (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey 1916). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Science and technology scholar John Law echoes this position in 2004, "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which partially illuminates why heavy boots feature in the Public Lab logo:
Participation in science died off as the field professionalized, until the internet enabled — and neoliberal cuts to government budgets for scientific research forced — a return to participation in the 2000s, but as directed by scientific authorities. See Cornell's Lab of Ornithology, and this discussion by Gwen Ottinger, long-standing board member of the Public Lab nonprofit:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that regulatory science becomes a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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24 | liz |
October 13, 2021 00:46
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the issues emanate from historical and ongoing injustices that compound along economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution is generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineagePublic Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination. See https://publiclab.org/organizing.
HistoricalOn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 echoes this position he writes "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which partially illuminates why heavy boots feature in the Public Lab logo:
Participation in science died off as the field professionalized, until the internet enabled — and neoliberal cuts to government budgets for scientific research forced — a return to participation in the 2000s, but as directed by scientific authorities. See Cornell's Lab of Ornithology, and this discussion by Gwen Ottinger, long-standing board member of the Public Lab nonprofit:
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceTo reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps: Hotspots can be invisible within areas of "attainment," to such a degree in certain cases that regulatory science becomes a barrier to equal access of a clean environment To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps: Powerful corporate "neighbors" can evade accountability To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data: There is missing data at relevant scales about what matters To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof: This injustice is heaped onto those experiencing environmental injustice To support empirical observation:Transforming anecdote to data, enabling people to speak languages of power To support environmental journalism: Coverage of complex issues with multiple stakeholders and types of knowledge To support data-based decision-making at all levels:The smallest units of government aren't equipped to collect or incorporate epistemologically diverse types of data. Actually this is true for all levels of government, "They can dish it but can't take it" To support community organizing: Because campaigns take years, and stress needs solidarity. For exchanging stories of the pursuit and achievement of justice. Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model of community science was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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23 | liz |
October 13, 2021 00:14
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanate from historical compounding, ongoing injustices that follow economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution are generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. Consider that even the Western scientific tradition acknowledges:
During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineageTranscluded from https://publiclab.org/organizing Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
HistoricalOn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 echoes this position he writes "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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22 | liz |
October 12, 2021 23:32
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanate from historical compounding, ongoing injustices that follow economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution are generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known, what they suspect, and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions for deeper exploration (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Changes in who has time to work on the project and external dynamics like a new administration of a governmental agency affect community science projects. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science may include:
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineageTranscluded from https://publiclab.org/organizing Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
HistoricalOn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 echoes this position he writes "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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21 | liz |
October 12, 2021 22:54
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanate from historical compounding, ongoing injustices that follow economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer leading to a course of action that is speedily taken by the powers that be, the vast majority of persistent pollution are generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Changes in who has time to work on the project as well as external dynamics like a new administration of a governmental agency affect community science projects. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science include
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Fast forward to science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 in "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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20 | liz |
October 12, 2021 22:46
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the leaking of an industrial chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanate from historical compounding, ongoing injustices that follow economic and racial lines. While every once in a while pollution turns out to be a simple issue with a straightforward answer and course of action, the vast majority of persistent pollution are generated by intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. What happens in a community science project?In a community science project, people with environmental health concerns write up what is known and what they wish to know (see https://publiclab.org/issue-brief), then break out a series of more specific questions (see https://publiclab.org/notes/renee/10-01-2021/creating-research-questions-for-your-community-science-project). We think of this as the start of problem identification and refinement, one of many possible phases in a community science project. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, problem refinement, research of many types including mapping, monitoring, sampling, hypothesis-driven scientific research, etc, plus organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. There are many reasons why these phases might change order, skip, or repeat. Changes in who has time to work on the project as well as external dynamics like a new administration of a governmental agency affect community science projects. Please keep in mind that campaigns for change take years and stress requires solidarity. During a community science project, people learn about, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look and/or a deeper historical truth telling in order to gain the grounding needed to achieve locally held goals. OutcomesOutcomes of community science include
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Fast forward to science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 in "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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19 | liz |
October 12, 2021 22:26
| about 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Why do we use the term "community science"?We use the term community science in the recognition that environmental change in the 21st Century United States requires both community organizing and scientific knowledge production. When would you start a community science project?You start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the presence of a chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanate from historical compounding injustices along economic and racial lines which continue into the present. These concerns tend to be intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. In a community science project, inquirers discuss, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look or a deeper historical truth telling in order to achieve locally held goals. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, definition, research (including many types of inquiry, monitoring, testing, mapping, as well as scientific research), organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. OutcomesOutcomes of community science include
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Fast forward to science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 in "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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18 | liz |
September 24, 2021 17:59
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry What do you mean "community science"?When many kinds of people ask many kinds of questions in place, about place, learning together in order to better manage the human-environment relationship, that’s community science. When would you start a community science project?You might start a community science project when you have a concern with at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the presence of a chemical, or differences in air quality) but which is also a problem larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanate from historical compounding injustices along economic and racial lines which continue into the present. These concerns tend to be intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. In a community science project, inquirers discuss, compare, and challenge each other’s various ways of knowing and the resulting knowledge to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look or a deeper historical truth telling in order to achieve locally held goals. Phases in a community science project may include problem identification, definition, research (including many types of inquiry, monitoring, testing, mapping, as well as scientific research), organizing, mobilizing, political advocacy, design, and remediation. OutcomesOutcomes of community science include
Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Fast forward to science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 in "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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17 | liz |
September 24, 2021 17:53
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry In a nutshellCommunity science happens when many diverse people ask many diverse questions in place, learning together in order to better manage the human-environment relationship. Different types of observations and ways of knowing are discussed, compared, and challenged to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look or a deeper historical truth telling in order to achieve locally held goals. Concerns that spark community science inquiries have at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the presence of a chemical, or differences in air quality) and which are larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanated from compounding injustices along economic and racial lines. Through diverse inquiry, these concerns often show themselves to be intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. Problem identification, definition, research, mobilizing, and political advocacy are all parts of community science. Outcomes of community science include data useable by journalists, regulators, and courts, and changes to the peer researchers themselves, because shared inquiry develops the social cohesion needed to see a social change process through. Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey XX). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the ol' Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, emphasizing that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Fast forward to science and technology scholar John Law writing in 2004 in "research does not access a pre-existing reality but is active in the creation of reality." Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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16 | liz |
September 22, 2021 19:26
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry In a nutshellCommunity science happens when many diverse people ask many diverse questions in place, learning together in order to better manage the human-environment relationship. Different types of observations and ways of knowing are discussed, compared, and challenged to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look or a deeper historical truth telling in order to achieve locally held goals. Concerns that spark community science inquiries have at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the presence of a chemical, or differences in air quality) and which are larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanated from compounding injustices along economic and racial lines. Through diverse inquiry, these concerns often show themselves to be intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. Problem identification, definition, research, mobilizing, and political advocacy are all parts of community science. Outcomes of community science include data useable by journalists, regulators, and courts, and changes to the peer researchers themselves, because shared inquiry develops the social cohesion needed to see a social change process through. Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey ). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, highlighting that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Community science excels at problem identification and definition. Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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15 | liz |
September 22, 2021 19:26
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry In a nutshellIn a nutshell, community science is happening when many diverse people ask many diverse questions in place, learning together in order to better manage the human-environment relationship. Different types of observations and ways of knowing are discussed, compared, and challenged to see what is deserving of a closer, more scientific look or a deeper historical truth telling in order to achieve locally held goals. Concerns that spark community science inquiries have at least one aspect which can be understood by science (such as the presence of a chemical, or differences in air quality) and which are larger than science in the sense that the concerns emanated from compounding injustices along economic and racial lines. Through diverse inquiry, these concerns often show themselves to be intractable, systemic, multi-owner problems that have fallen (or been pushed) through the gaps in environmental governance and require social and political action to address. Problem identification, definition, research, mobilizing, and political advocacy are all parts of community science. Outcomes of community science include data useable by journalists, regulators, and courts, and changes to the peer researchers themselves, because shared inquiry develops the social cohesion needed to see a social change process through. Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineage1970s and onward: action research (participatory action research, community-based participatory research) participatory mapping 1980s and onward: popular epidemiology 1990s and onward: street science, public participation in geographic information systems HistoricalIn a longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey ). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, highlighting that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Community science excels at problem identification and definition. Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record:
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
In the 1900s, That Western science established its alternative tradition
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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14 | liz |
September 21, 2021 19:04
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineagePopular epidemiology HistoricalIn an even longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey ). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, a clear rejection of the Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the beginning of inquiry, highlighting that the problem definition stage is an essential part of the research. Problem definition, by the way, is what community science excels at. Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record.
More on early science, which illuminates the boots in the Public Lab logo:
There has been a
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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13 | liz |
September 21, 2021 18:54
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Where did this term come from?The term "community science" was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the current growth in the "community science movement" including the explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. To read this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science," excerpted here:
Additional lineagePopular epidemiology HistoricalIn an even longer trajectory, community science can be understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey ). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, which rejected the Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the start of inquiry, meaning that the problem definition stage is part of the research. Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record.
More on the
There has been a
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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12 | liz |
September 21, 2021 18:41
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Where did this term come from?The term community science was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the growth in the "community science movement" including the current explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. For this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science":
Additional lineagePopular epidemiology HistoricalIn an even longer trajectory, community science is understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey ). Dewey wrote about the patterns he observed in problem solving, which included a starting point of feeling that something was wrong, which rejected the Western split between emotion and reason. He also wrote that problems don't exist before the start of inquiry, meaning that the problem definition stage is part of the research. Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record.
More on the
There has been a
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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11 | liz |
September 21, 2021 18:36
| over 3 years ago
This content is stewarded by @Liz Barry Where did this term come from?The term community science was first used in the 1980's and 1990's by environmental justice organizations Communities for a Better Environment and Global Community Monitor who were using low-cost monitoring equipment to document industrial emissions. Public Lab organized an event in 2014 with Global Community Monitor and Jackie James of Citizen Science Community Resources called "Community-based Science for Action." Public Lab traces the growth in the "community science movement" including the current explosion of usage in the term community science by institutions around the world to our joining forces with the existing environmental justice monitoring movement. For this story in a longer format, see Dosemagen's piece "Exploring the Roots: the evolution of civic and community science":
Additional lineagePopular epidemiology HistoricalIn an even longer trajectory, community science is understood as a practice of inquiry, or action research, described by Kurt Lewin in the 1940's as ‘a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of planning, action and fact finding about the results of the action’ (Lewin, 1946/1948, p. 206). Lewin in turn was working in the pragmatic philosophical tradition established by John Dewey, in which knowledge is judged by its usefulness to human problems, and truth is socially shared and serves as the basis for what people hold in common (Dewey ). Dewey wrote about problem solving Although western science has more recently established a tradition of participation from within its ranks known as "citizen science", professional science is the aberration in the historical record.
Components of Public Lab's model
Why we need community scienceBy @liz, from previous presentations over many years: To reduce harm caused by regulatory gaps
To reduce harm caused by enforcement gaps
To reduce harm caused by gaps in government data
To reduce harm caused by the structurally unjust burden of proof
To support empirical observation
To support environmental journalism
To support data-based decision-making at all levels
To support community organizing
Our first attempt in print at defining Public Lab's model was written up in 2015 by @/shannon and @/gretchengehrke: "…collaboratively-led scientific investigation and exploration to address community defined questions, allowing for engagement in the entirety of the scientific process. Unique in comparison to citizen science, community science may or may not include partnerships with professional scientists, emphasizes the community’s ownership of research and access to resulting data, and orients towards community goals and working together in scalable networks to encourage collaborative learning and civic engagement." In a Public Lab and TEx worksession in summer 2019, a short list of shared concerns emerged:
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