This collection of essays by Sheila Jasanoff explores how
democratic governments construct public reason, that is, the forms
of evidence and argument used in making state decisions accountable
to citizens. The term public reason as used here is not simply a
matter of deploying principled arguments that respect the norms of
democratic deliberation. Jasanoff investigates what states do in
practice when they claim to be reasoning in the public interest.
Reason, from this perspective, comprises the institutional
practices, discourses, techniques and instruments through which
governments claim legitimacy in an era of potentially unbounded
risks physical, political, and moral. Those legitimating efforts,
in turn, depend on citizens acceptance of the forms of reasoning
that governments offer. Included here therefore is an inquiry into
the conditions that lead citizens of democratic societies to accept
policy justification as being reasonable. These modes of public
knowing, or civic epistemologies, are integral to the constitution
of contemporary political cultures.
Methodologically, the book is grounded in the field of Science and
Technology Studies (STS). It uses in-depth qualitative studies of
legal and political practices to shed light on divergent
cross-cultural constructions of public reason and the reasoning
political subject. The collection as a whole contributes to
democratic theory, legal studies, comparative politics, geography,
and ethnographies of modernity, as well as STS.
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