The Politics of Researching Carbon Trading in Australia
Clive Spash
No 2014/03, SRE-Discussion Papers from WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
Abstract:
This paper explores the conflicts of interest present in science policy and how claims being made for evidence based science can be used to suppress critical social science research. The specific case presented concerns the attempts to ban and censor my work criticising the economics of carbon emissions trading while I was working for the Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia. The role of management and the Science Minister are documented through their own public statements. The case raises general issues about the role of epistemic communities in the production of knowledge, the potential for manipulation of information under the guise of quality control and the problems created by claiming a fact-value dichotomy in the science-policy interface. The implications go well beyond just climate change research and challenge how public policy is being formulated in modern industrial societies where scientific knowledge and corporate interests are closely intertwined. (author's abstract)
Keywords: Science policy; censorship; CSIRO; research; peer review; climate change; economics; greenhouse gas control; carbon emission trading; Australia; mining corporations; naïve objectivism; evidence based science (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Working Paper: The Politics of Researching Carbon Trading in Australia (2014) 
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