Science Spaces as ‘Ethnoscapes’: Identity, Perception and the Production of Locality
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Science ’Scapes and Ethnoscapes
“these are not objectively given relations that look the same from every angle of vision but, rather, …they are deeply perspectival constructs, inflected by the historical, linguistic, and political situatedness of different sorts of actors: nation-states, multinationals, diasporic communities, as well as subnational groupings and movements (whether religious, political, or economic), and even intimate face-to-face groups, such as villages, neighborhoods, and families. Indeed, the individual actor is the last locus of this perspectival set of landscapes, for these landscapes are eventually navigated by agents who both experience and constitute larger formations, in part from their own sense of what these landscapes offer”.[8] (pp. 296–297)
2. Science Vale Oxford, Tsukuba Science City and Kennispark Twente as Technoscapes and Ideoscapes
2.1. Science Vale Oxford
2.2. Tsukuba Science City
“Part of it is a metropolitan city, another part is like a provincial town, and still other areas resemble the original farming communities with old-fashioned village schools and the like. There’s nowhere like it in Japan.”
2.3. Kennispark
3. Science ’Scapes and International Scientific Identities
3.1. Science Vale Oxford
“Science is international. Top science must be international. You cannot put borders on that, or employ only British scientists – it will not work. At the end of the day that is the baseline. If we want to claim that we have international level science then we need to employ international people and have users from abroad”.(Interview, 11.7.16)
“Starting in a project in the construction phase – building it from scratch – is a dream for a physicist like me. You can build your own instrument, you can design it, construct it, commission and use it in doing research. It’s a dream for us. And on the other hand these facilities, in terms of research, are really international. What I’d learned in my previous job immediately translated here because the method and the technology was the same. So I see the benefit for myself of applying things here – partly for my benefit, but also a national facility like this took benefit from my knowledge and know-how.”(Interview 19.7.16)
3.2. Tsukuba Science City
“The high energy physicists in Japan work at the margins of two empires: the international scientific community, which is based in North America and Europe, and the Japanese scientific community, which is based in the universities and the Ministry of Education. A few high energy physicists used that bachigai outsider position to build Tsukuba Science City, Tsukuba University, and KEK, the Japanese National Laboratory for high energy physics. They accomplished this through strategic use of gaiatsu foreign pressure, among other strategies, and made the most of the Japanese public’s and government’s concerns about kokusaika, Japan’s national identity in global politics. By building a national laboratory with state-of-the-art research equipment they vastly increased their status in the international scientific community, but that community is still centered somewhere else. Japanese scientists now wield some power in that international high energy physics community, but few American or European physicists have yet bothered to learn about the political economy of big science in Japan”.[38] (pp. 49–50)
“In particle physics nowadays just CERN is more than half of the community and most younger people are attracted by the scale of the project it is more than natural to have a dream to work there.”(6 June 2016)
“The culture… it’s completely different. In the Netherlands it is much more direct. If you have an idea, it doesn’t matter who you are, you can just say your idea to anyone, and discuss it and improve it and maybe manage it. But here it is more like a pyramid, hierarchy. … Relationships are the key to getting any project started. If you need funding or if you need to consult with an expert you never go directly to the person in charge. You have to go to someone you know who knows someone that they know … you can’t go directly.”(Interviewee, Public Works Research Institute, 9 June 2016)
3.3. Kennispark
4. International Perceptions of Technoscapes
4.1. SVO
4.2. Tsukuba
“Underscoring their isolation from the conventional sites of power, the science city is located in Ibaraki, an economically depressed region which has the reputation among sophisticated Tokyoites of being hopelessly déclassé.”
“Instead of identifying themselves with places all Japanese would recognize as imperial sites, they just used a local, inconsequential place-name, knowing that to other foreigners in the international scientific community all the names … would be inconsequential. It was a joke about the marginality of the whole place. ”[19] (p. 450)
4.3. Kennispark
5. Conclusion: Science Spaces as Comparative Ethnoscapes
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Valler, D.; Phelps, N.; Miao, J.T.; Benneworth, P.; Eckardt, F. Science Spaces as ‘Ethnoscapes’: Identity, Perception and the Production of Locality. Urban Sci. 2019, 3, 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci3010017
Valler D, Phelps N, Miao JT, Benneworth P, Eckardt F. Science Spaces as ‘Ethnoscapes’: Identity, Perception and the Production of Locality. Urban Science. 2019; 3(1):17. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci3010017
Chicago/Turabian StyleValler, Dave, Nicholas Phelps, Julie Tian Miao, Paul Benneworth, and Franziska Eckardt. 2019. "Science Spaces as ‘Ethnoscapes’: Identity, Perception and the Production of Locality" Urban Science 3, no. 1: 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci3010017
APA StyleValler, D., Phelps, N., Miao, J. T., Benneworth, P., & Eckardt, F. (2019). Science Spaces as ‘Ethnoscapes’: Identity, Perception and the Production of Locality. Urban Science, 3(1), 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci3010017