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The Promise of Participation and Decision-Making Power in Citizen Science
Author(s) -
Irene Eleta,
Gemma Galdón Clavell,
Valeria Righi,
Mara Balestrini
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
citizen science theory and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2057-4991
DOI - 10.5334/cstp.171
Subject(s) - citizen science , public relations , skepticism , political science , class (philosophy) , corporate governance , power (physics) , set (abstract data type) , public participation , engineering ethics , sociology , business , computer science , engineering , physics , quantum mechanics , philosophy , botany , epistemology , finance , artificial intelligence , biology , programming language
Citizen science is challenging professional researchers and their organizations to rethink the way they do science and connect with society. In any citizen science project, professional researchers are “making a promise” to the public about the level of participation and power in decision making that they are willing to provide to citizen scientists. Researchers should set expectations explicitly to ensure informed participation, trust, and motivation. Also, the design of tools for informed consent, information sharing, recognition, and privacy has to be adapted to the new power relations and distributed knowledge production. Based on fieldwork experiences and literature review about environmental and biomedical citizen science, this article examines the challenges and proposes solutions for: 1) setting expectations for informed participation; 2) addressing privacy concerns and adapting informed consent to evolving interests and networked environments; and 3) promoting citizen governance of research data. Citizen science has the potential to both increase scientific literacy and counteract mistrust and skepticism about scientific evidence of global problems (such as climate change) that need to be addressed. However, there are still many challenges to fulfilling the promise of citizen science – for example, empowering people and gaining trust. A few inspiring initiatives help us reflect on a facilitation model for engagement and informed participation; privacy by design; and new governance models for research data provided by citizen scientists.

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