Autor/es
Descripción
ver mas
Colaborador
Carli, Sandra
Materias
Idioma
spa
Extent
219 p.
Derechos
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Formato
application/pdf
Identificador
Cobertura
ARG
Abstract
This thesis aims to reflect on the frontiers of the public university and society from the perspective of science communication. Its specificity is demarcated by the observation of an institution -the University of Buenos Aires-, from the study of its Interdisciplinary Programmes on Climate Change (PIUBACC); Social Marginalisations (PIUBAMAS); Sustainable Energies (PIUBAES); Industrial, Agricultural and Public Works and Services Development (PIUBAD); and Transport (PIUBAT), created between 2007 and 2012 and still in force. In each of them, the thirteen academic units and their institutes participate heterogeneously through at least one hundred researchers, scholarship holders and students, bringing together academic and professional knowledge from the articulation of the different disciplines with other knowledge from actors in the public and private sectors.
The methodological strategy it proposes constitutes a novel contribution to the study of science communication. It involves the use of a set of tools from material semiotics, sensibilities and methods of analysis from Network Actor Theory for the reassembly of networks of human and non-human actors (Latour, 2008; Callon, 1986; Venturini 2009; Venturini et al, 2016). The perspective adopted involves a way of approaching science communication processes whose usefulness lies in contributing to making visible and analysing the contributory role played by heterogeneous actors involved in these processes. In this way, the thesis aims to understand how science communication is produced in these programmes by identifying the networks of actors that produce it by articulating with each other. Also, to analyse how the University of Buenos Aires defines itself and presents itself publicly in the public space, in its aspiration to make this knowledge articulate in the university-society relationship.
The methodological strategy it proposes constitutes a novel contribution to the study of science communication. It involves the use of a set of tools from material semiotics, sensibilities and methods of analysis from Network Actor Theory for the reassembly of networks of human and non-human actors (Latour, 2008; Callon, 1986; Venturini 2009; Venturini et al, 2016). The perspective adopted involves a way of approaching science communication processes whose usefulness lies in contributing to making visible and analysing the contributory role played by heterogeneous actors involved in these processes. In this way, the thesis aims to understand how science communication is produced in these programmes by identifying the networks of actors that produce it by articulating with each other. Also, to analyse how the University of Buenos Aires defines itself and presents itself publicly in the public space, in its aspiration to make this knowledge articulate in the university-society relationship.
Título obtenido
Magister de la Universidad de Buenos Aires en Investigación en Ciencias Sociales
Institución otorgante
Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales