Public Secrets, Muzzled Science: Agnotological Practice, State Performance, and Dying Salmon in British Columbia

Item Type

Abstract

This article examines recent efforts by the Canadian government to silence a federal scientist from publicly speaking about her research on the decline in Fraser River sockeye salmon. I argue that the information embargo through which Canadian officials silenced government science not only served an agnotological function of demobilizing the opposition by promoting public ignorance about ecological issues, but also functioned as a means of state making by producing an image of the state as a unitary and powerful actor. This performance of secrecy represents a critical component of contemporary governance, and its examination has much to reveal about the central role that the production of a state effect plays in neoliberalism.

Subject

Agnotology
Canada
Ecology
Fraser River (B.C.) -- Environmental conditions
Muzzling
Neoliberalism
Salmon
Science
Sockeye salmon
Sockeye salmon fisheries
State effect

Publication Year

2016

Publication Date

2016-09-02

Journal abreviation

PoLAR: Political & Legal Anthropology Review

Source

EBSCOhost

License

ISSN

1081-6976

Physical Description

vol. 39, pp. 89-103

Short Title

Public Secrets, Muzzled Science

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Public Secrets, Muzzled Science: Agnotological Practice, State Performance, and Dying Salmon in British Columbia, dans Science & Ignorance, consulté le 21 Novembre 2024, https://ignorancestudies.inist.fr/s/science-ignorance/item/4804

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