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Full Description
We live in an age where biodiversity is declining at an unprecedented rate, and the natural environment is increasingly under stress. Digital technologies can play a pivotal role in addressing these challenges. This book draws on several case studies of digital participatory science initiatives to reflectively analyze changes in biodiversity knowledge, expertise and infrastructures.
It analyses changes in biodiversity knowledge, expertise and infrastructures in several digital participatory or citizen science initiatives and examines how these projects interact with their local environments and how the results are transported and made visible in other contexts. The projects described involve different groups including indigenous peoples, amateur naturalists, hunters, and researchers, in several geographical contexts, such as France, Finland and Canada, all with ties to international networks.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Science as Culture.
Contents
1. Introduction: digital participatory biodiversity science 2. Chains of Participation in Producing Biodiversity Infrastructures: Digital Reconfigurations of Scientific Work 3. Faune France: Amateur Naturalists' Attachment and Indebtedness in a Citizen Science Biodiversity Database 4. Sharing epistemic power: digitally mediated wolf monitoring in Finland 5. How data governance principles influence participation in biodiversity science



