In this paper we critically review recent developments in policies,
practices and philosophies pertaining to the mediation between science and the
public within the EU and the UK, focusing in particular on the current paradigm of
Public Understanding of Science and Technology (PEST) which seeks to depart
from the science information-transmission associated with previous paradigms, and
enact a deliberative democracy model. We first outline the features of the current
crisis in democracy and discuss deliberative democracy as a response to this crisis.
We then map out and critically review the broad outlines of recent policy developments
in public-science mediation in the EU and UK contexts, focusing on the
shift towards the deliberative-democratic model. We conclude with some critical
thoughts on the complex interrelationships between democracy, equality, science
and informal pedagogies in public-science mediations. We argue that science and
democracy operate within distinct value-spheres that are not necessarily consonant
with each other. We also problematize the now common dismissal of informationtransmission
of science as inimical to democratic engagement, and argue for a
reassessment of the role and importance of informal science learning for the ‘‘lay’’
public, provided within the framework of a deliberative democracy that is not
reducible to consensus building or the mere expression of opinions rooted in social
and cultural givens. This, we argue, can be delivered by a model of PEST that is
creative and experimental, with both educational and democratic functions
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