Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10500608 | Journal of Historical Geography | 2005 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Prompted by contemporary concerns in the West over a global vision of nature and society at risk, this paper builds on recent studies of expertise within a broader public culture. By focusing on earlier episodes of social and political uncertainty, the paper argues that there is scope to extend such analysis in terms of historical geographies of specialist knowledge. The paper examines the formative years of British ecology, a discipline which from its beginnings in the wake of urban industrialism more than a century ago, was centrally concerned with the relations of human well-being and the environment. In exploring when, where and how an ecological expertise became defined, it shifts the focus from familiar milestones in the discipline's public recognition. By tracing the discursive and material practices of those who sought to identify and define ecology as a specialism, the paper illustrates the importance of groupings within and beyond accredited expertise in giving it meaning and purpose. In doing so it highlights the fragility and fluidity of the boundaries around 'expertise', and the significance of geographical context and connections in shaping its conduct and content. In terms of broader historical geographies, the paper suggests that while 'expert' cultures may be projected as giving greater public reassurance, the sense of certainty that this implies disguises complex processes in which the boundaries are imprecise between specialist and lay knowledge and between scientific and public spaces.
Keywords
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Arts and Humanities
History
Authors
M. Bell, J. Sheail,