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      • 1 The public trust building efforts include science education (especially K-12), ensuring research integrity and legal compliance by scientific institutions, as well as including the public in various areas of scientific governance (e.g. membership on research ethics boards), scientific practice (e.g. citizen science projects), and policy decision making (e.g. mini-publics/citizen juries).
      www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03080188.2022.2152243
  1. Dec 27, 2022 · There are three bases central to assessing scientific expertise for trustworthiness: 1) the presence of expertise, 2) the engagement of the expert in a well-functioning expert community and 3) the sharing of values with the public.

  2. Rather, starting from the observation that public trust in science is enormous, I want to pose some questions about the basis of that trust. On what grounds, on the basis of what understandings, do we trust scientists to tell the truth about the natural world, as opposed to some other group of practitioners like psychics or captains of industry?

    • Ruth Ellen Bulger, Elizabeth Meyer Bobby, Harvey V. Fineberg
    • 1995
    • 1995
  3. Oct 14, 2022 · The ideal of well-placed public trust in science distributes different burdens on different actors and institutions. This think piece by Gürol Irzik and Faik Kurtulmus discusses how scientists must earn public trust by attending to their legitimate worries.

  4. Sep 9, 2019 · Signaling Trustworthiness of the Scientific Enterprise to the Public Science is trustworthy in part because it honors its norms. Adherence to these norms increases the reliability of the resulting knowledge and the likelihood that the public views science as reliable.

    • Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Marcia McNutt, Veronique Kiermer, Richard Sever
    • 10.1073/pnas.1913039116
    • 2019
    • 2019/09/09
  5. Naomi Scheman has argued that one of the purposes of science is to provide publically beneficial research products. That is to say, one purpose of scien-tific research activities is to produce reliable knowledge that can be used by more than just scientists (Scheman 2001; Wilholt 2009).

    • 169KB
    • 15
  6. To enjoy the public's trust, the research community must first be clear about what it is expected to do and then avoid the incidents that prevent it from meeting those expectations.

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  8. Sep 29, 2020 · Across the 20 places surveyed, there is relatively high trust in the military and scientists to do what is right for the public; trust tends to be lower in the national government, news media and business leaders, by comparison.