Image for Science Interrupted

Science Interrupted : Rethinking Research Practice with Bureaucracy, Agroforestry, and Ethnography

Part of the Expertise: Cultures and Technologies of Knowledge series
See all formats and editions

Science Interrupted examines how scientists in China pursue environmental sustainability within the constraints of domestic and international bureaucracies.

Timothy G. McLellan offers a theoretical framework for analyzing the formal procedural work of Chinese bureaucracy—work that is overlooked when China scholars restrict their gaze to the informal and interpersonal channels through which bureaucracy is often navigated.

Homing in on an agroforestry research organization in southwest China, the author takes the experiences of the organization's staff in navigating diverse international funding regimes and authoritarian state institutions as entry points for understanding the pervasiveness of bureaucracy in contemporary science.

He asks: What if we take the tools, sensibilities, and practices of bureaucracies seriously not only as objects of critique but as resources for re-thinking scientific practice?

Extending a mode of anthropological research in which ethnography serves as source of theory as well as source of data, Science Interrupted thinks with, and not only against, bureaucracy.

McLellan shows that ethnographic engagement with bureaucracy enables us to imagine more democratic and more collaborative modes of scientific practice.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£92.80 Save 20.00%
RRP £116.00
Product Details
Cornell University Press
1501773321 / 9781501773327
Hardback
15/01/2024
United States
English
174 pages
23 cm