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Main Author: Bogusz, Tanja
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: History and philosophy of the life sciences 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40705120/
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author Bogusz, Tanja
author_facet Bogusz, Tanja
Bogusz, Tanja
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Valuating marine knowledge: Heterogeneous collaborations at the Concarneau marine station. Bogusz, Tanja France Knowledge Oceans and Seas Cooperative Behavior Humans Marine Biology Marine stations have long been explored by science and technology studies (STS) and the humanities as boundary objects between the field and the lab. However, through their position, they embrace rather three domains which have been separated by the modern organization of knowledge-sea, science, and society-not only epistemically, but also physically. In contrast to time-limited marine expeditions or pure laboratory work, marine stations enact "science with their feet in the water" while situated within concrete local societies. Therefore, many marine stations provide multiple ways of valuating the relation between the sea and society. However, in an era of considerable polarization regarding a sustainable future for coastal communities, valuating marine knowledge is a socially complex endeavor. Based on a five-month ethnography of the world's oldest existing institution of this kind, the Station Marine de Concarneau in Brittany, France, this paper discusses its practical enactment of heterogeneous values associated with marine knowledge. The paper, first, introduces the Concarneau station, its particular research profile, and its local exposure. Second, an experimentalist approach based on pragmatism and STS is explored in order to rethink current research on the valuation of socio-marine cohesion. Third, two types of valuating marine knowledge through heterogeneous collaborations at the station are explored: a) socio-technical and b) socio-epistemic. Finally, the paper deduces the importance of marine stations for inter- and transdisciplinary collaboration within the global transformation of sea-society relations.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40705120
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher History and philosophy of the life sciences
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Valuating marine knowledge: Heterogeneous collaborations at the Concarneau marine station.
Bogusz, Tanja
France
Knowledge
Oceans and Seas
Cooperative Behavior
Humans
Marine Biology
Valuating marine knowledge: Heterogeneous collaborations at the Concarneau marine station. Bogusz, Tanja France Knowledge Oceans and Seas Cooperative Behavior Humans Marine Biology Marine stations have long been explored by science and technology studies (STS) and the humanities as boundary objects between the field and the lab. However, through their position, they embrace rather three domains which have been separated by the modern organization of knowledge-sea, science, and society-not only epistemically, but also physically. In contrast to time-limited marine expeditions or pure laboratory work, marine stations enact "science with their feet in the water" while situated within concrete local societies. Therefore, many marine stations provide multiple ways of valuating the relation between the sea and society. However, in an era of considerable polarization regarding a sustainable future for coastal communities, valuating marine knowledge is a socially complex endeavor. Based on a five-month ethnography of the world's oldest existing institution of this kind, the Station Marine de Concarneau in Brittany, France, this paper discusses its practical enactment of heterogeneous values associated with marine knowledge. The paper, first, introduces the Concarneau station, its particular research profile, and its local exposure. Second, an experimentalist approach based on pragmatism and STS is explored in order to rethink current research on the valuation of socio-marine cohesion. Third, two types of valuating marine knowledge through heterogeneous collaborations at the station are explored: a) socio-technical and b) socio-epistemic. Finally, the paper deduces the importance of marine stations for inter- and transdisciplinary collaboration within the global transformation of sea-society relations.
title Valuating marine knowledge: Heterogeneous collaborations at the Concarneau marine station.
topic France
Knowledge
Oceans and Seas
Cooperative Behavior
Humans
Marine Biology
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40705120/