Publications
The following is a list of some of the Centre for the Public Awareness of Science publications.
Refereed journal papers
If you read one of the latest print issues of Science, you'll see CPAS Senior Lecturer Dr Ehsan Nabavi and colleagues' book review on "The responsibility turn: Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic inspire a guide to recognising the politics of modelling."
Mathematical modellers have traditionally considered politics irrelevant to their practice, arguing that their work represents objective science, the implications of which are determined by others’ use of it. However, this perspective has evolved as researchers have incorporated insights from science and technology studies to explore modelling beyond its technical aspects. The recent book The Politics of Modelling, edited by Andrea Saltelli and Monica Di Fiore, represents such an endeavour. Read the full review here.
For more context, listen to Ehsan's conversation with Andrea Saltelli on ABC, where they discuss the politics of modelling and the future of modelling in public policy issues, especially post-COVID. Listen to the podcast here.
Refereed journal papers
- Waiting for advice that is beyond doubt: uncertainty as Australia's reason for joining the invasion of Iraq.
Visting Fellow and recent CPAS alum Christiane Gerblinger recently published her article, 'Waiting for advice that is beyond doubt: uncertainty as Australia's reason for joining the invasion of Iraq', with the Intelligence and National Security journal.
A dominant theme across examinations of the intelligence used to justify invading Iraq in 2003 is that political decision-makers amplified the clarity of their evidence. What has been missed is that Australia did exactly the opposite: here, the political leadership channelled uncertainty, inconclusiveness and doubt into highly effective rhetorical manoeuvres that embraced the imperfection of evidence and, with it, sufficiently weakened arguments that an invasion could take place only with absolute proof. Christiane's article examines the role of Australian intelligence amid a complex mix of factors that facilitated those manoeuvres.
Read more here.
Refereed journal papers
de Kauwe, V., Orthia, L.A. (2018). Knowledge, power and the ethics illusion: Explaining diverse viewer interpretations of the politics in classic era Doctor Who. The Journal of Popular Television, 6(2). doi: 10.1386/jptv.6.2.151_1
Dunn, M.E., McKinnon, M. (2018). How can university sexual health promotion events reach those most at risk? A cross-sectional study. Sexual Health. https://doi.org/10.1071/SH16228
Linvill, Darren L., Boatwright, Brandon C. & Grant, Will J. (2018) “Back-stage” dissent: student Twitter use addressing instructor ideology. Communication Education. Prepublished 29 Jan 2018.
Refereed journal papers
McKinnon, M., Ahmad, M., Bongers, M., Chevalier, R., Telfer, I., & Van Dorssen, C. (2017). Media coverage of lethal control: A case study of kangaroo culling in the Australian Capital Territory. Human Dimensions of Wildlife. Prepublished online 8 December 2017. doi: 10.1080/10871209.2018.1396511.
Medvecky, F. & Leach, J. (2017). Editorial: The ethics of science communication. Journal of Science Communication, 16(04), E1-5.
Gascoigne, T. & Metcalfe, J. (2017) The emergence of modern science communication in Australia. Journal of Science Communication, 16(03), A01.
McKinnon, M., Howes, J., Leach, A. & Prokop, N. (2017). Perils and positives of science journalism in Australia. Public Understanding of Science. Prepublished online 29 March 2017. doi: 10.1177/0963662517701589.
Rowbotham S., McKinnon M., Leach J., Lamberts R. & Hawe P. (2017). Does citizen science have the capacity to transform population health science? Critical Public Health. Prepublished 9 November 2017, doi:10.1080/09581596.2017.1395393.
McKinnon M. & Orthia L.A. (2017). Vaccination communication strategies: What have we learned, and lost, in 200 years? Special issue ‘History of science communication’, Journal of Science Communication, 16(03), A08.
McGillion, C. (2017). Animation as a science communication tool in Timor-Leste. Science Communication, 39(2), 278-285. doi: 10.1177/1075547017696164.
Rayner, J. (2017). Using a cell phone to investigate the skin depth effect in salt water. The Physics Teacher, 55, 83-86. doi: 10.1119/1.4974118
Selected media coverage
ANU Media. (2017, October 30). ANU seeks public views on gene-altering technology. ANU News. Story on Michel Watson's PhD research.
CBAA. (2017, October 12-19). Multiple broadcasters, syndicated Australia Wide (radio). Interview with Vanessa de Kauwe about her PhD research.
ANU Media. (2017, October 11). Science boosts skills of young people with intellectual disabilities. ANU News. Reports on Vanessa de Kauwe's PhD research.
ANU News. (2017, April 27). ANU collaborates with African science centres. ANU News.
ANU Science. (2017, November 28). When science skills become life skills. ANU Science, Environment, Health and Medicine Research Stories. Reports on Vanessa de Kauwe's PhD research.
Varischetti, B. (2017, October 12) Survey tests attitudes to human gene therapy. ABC Perth Drive. Interview with Michel Watson about her PhD research.
Hunt, J. (2017, October 12). Mornings, ABC South Eastern. Interview with Vanessa de Kauwe about her PhD research.
ABC Science. (2017, September 28). ABC launches science cadetship in memory of 'science news geek' Darren Osborne. ABC News. Mentions Darren Osborne's time at the ANU and with the Science Circus.
Kilburn, M. (2017, August) Texting the Doctor. Doctor Who Magazine, Special edition #47 'Referencing the Doctor', pp. 38-41. Includes interview with Lindy Orthia about her 2013 book Doctor Who and Race.
Conference presentations
Perera, S. & Zhang, T. (2017) Co-construction of multicultural perspectives within science communication: A learning community case study. Paper presented at Australasian Association for the History, Philosophy & Social Studies of Science Biennial Conference, Wollongong, 22-24 November 2017.
Smith, C. (2017). Tradeoffs in deliberative public engagement with science. Presented at the Australian Science Communicators National Conference, Adelaide, 23-24 February 2017.
Anggaryani, M. (2017) Should science communicators learn from the Yogyakartans? Paper presented at Australasian Association for the History, Philosophy & Social Studies of Science Biennial Conference, Wollongong, 22-24 November 2017.
Roberson, T. (2017). Seeing [hyped] science differently. Presented at the Australian Science Communicators National Conference, Adelaide, 23-24 February 2017.
Book chapters
Smith, C. (2017). A case study of crowdsourcing imagery coding in natural disasters. In S. Hai-Jew (ed.) Data Analytics in Digital Humanities, Springer, pp. 2017-230.
Popular media
Grant, W.J. & Lamberts, R. (2017, March 14). Seven things to keep in mind if you're going to March for Science. The Conversation.
Walker, G. (2017, April 26). A science circus for Southeast Asia. New Mandala.
Watson, M. (2017, October 19). A CRISPR way forward: developments in human gene therapy. Woroni Newspaper.