
Post-normal science (PNS) was developed in the 1990s by
Silvio Funtowicz and
Jerome R. Ravetz.
[Funtowicz, S. O. and Ravetz, J. R., 1991. "A New Scientific Methodology for Global Environmental Issues", in Costanza, R. (ed.), Ecological Economics: The Science and Management of Sustainability: 137–152. New York: Columbia University Press.] It is a problem-solving strategy appropriate when "facts
reuncertain, values in dispute, stakes high and decisions urgent", conditions often present in policy-relevant research. In those situations, PNS recommends suspending temporarily the traditional scientific ideal of truth, concentrating on quality as assessed by internal and extended peer communities.
[EJOLT. (2023). EJAtlas , Mapping Environmental Justice. ]Environmental Justice Atlas
The Environmental Justice Atlas, sometimes known as EJAtlas is a website that documents environmental conflict.
The website was published by Environmental Justice Organisations, Liability and Trade (Ejolt) and moderated by the Autonomous Universi ...
. https://ejatlas.org/
PNS can be considered as complementing the styles of analysis based on risk and cost-benefit analysis prevailing at that time and integrating concepts of a new critical science developed in previous works by the same authors.
[Funtowicz, S. and Ravetz, J., 1990. Uncertainty and Quality in Science for Policy. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.][Ravetz, J. R., 1971. Scientific Knowledge and its Social Problems. Oxford University Press.]
PNS is not a new scientific method following
Aristotle
Aristotle (; 384–322 BC) was an Ancient Greek philosophy, Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath. His writings cover a broad range of subjects spanning the natural sciences, philosophy, linguistics, economics, politics, psychology, a ...
and
Bacon
Bacon is a type of Curing (food preservation), salt-cured pork made from various cuts of meat, cuts, typically the pork belly, belly or less fatty parts of the back. It is eaten as a side dish (particularly in breakfasts), used as a central in ...
, a new paradigm in the Kuhnian sense, or an attempt to reach a new ‘normal’. It is instead, a set of insights to guide actionable and robust knowledge production for policy decision making and action in challenges like pandemics, ecosystems collapse,
biodiversity loss
Biodiversity loss happens when plant or animal species disappear completely from Earth (extinction) or when there is a decrease or disappearance of species in a specific area. Biodiversity loss means that there is a reduction in Biodiversity, b ...
and, in general, sustainability transitions.
[Funtowicz, S. and Ravetz, J., "Post-normal science", in ''Companion to Environmental Studies'', Edited ByNoel Castree, Mike Hulme, James D. Proctor, 2018, Routledge.]
Context
According to its proponents
Silvio Funtowicz and
Jerome R. Ravetz, the name "post-normal science" echoes the seminal work on modern science by
Thomas Kuhn
Thomas Samuel Kuhn (; July 18, 1922 – June 17, 1996) was an American History and philosophy of science, historian and philosopher of science whose 1962 book ''The Structure of Scientific Revolutions'' was influential in both academic and ...
.
[T. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. University of Chicago Press, 1962.] For Carrozza
PNS can be "framed in terms of a call for the ‘democratization of expertise’", and as a "reaction against long-term trends of ‘scientization’ of politics—the tendency towards assigning to experts a critical role in policymaking while marginalizing laypeople". For Mike Hulme (2007), writing on ''
The Guardian
''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in Manchester in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'' and changed its name in 1959, followed by a move to London. Along with its sister paper, ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardi ...
'',
climate change
Present-day climate change includes both global warming—the ongoing increase in Global surface temperature, global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate system. Climate variability and change, Climate change in ...
seems to fall into the category of issues which are best dealt with in the context of PNS and notes that “Disputes in post-normal science focus as often on the process of science - who gets funded, who evaluates quality, who has the ear of policy - as on the facts of science”. Climate science as PNS was already proposed by the late
Stephen Schneider, and a similar linkage was propose for the workings of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is an intergovernmental body of the United Nations. Its job is to "provide governments at all levels with scientific information that they can use to develop climate policies". The World Met ...
.
From the ecological perspective post-normal science can be situated in the context of 'crisis disciplines' – a term coined by the conservation biologist
Michael E. Soulé to indicate approaches addressing fears, emerging in the seventies, that the world was on the verge of
ecological collapse
An ecosystem, short for ecological systems theory, system, is defined as a collection of interacting Organism, organisms within a biophysical environment. Ecosystems are never static, and are continually subject to both stabilizing and destabiliz ...
. In this respect Michael Egan
defines PNS as a 'survival science'. More recently PNS has been defined as a movement of ‘informed critical resistance, reform and the making of futures’.
[J. R. Ravetz, "Post-Normal Science Symposium: Address by Jerome Ravetz Reflections on ‘informed critical resistance, reform and the making of futures,’" University of Oxford, Institute for Science, Innovation and Society, 2018. nline Available: https://www.insis.ox.ac.uk/article/post-normal-science-symposium-address-jerome-ravetz]
Moving from PNS
Ziauddin Sardar developed the concept of
Postnormal Times (PNT). Sardar was the editor o
FUTURESwhen it published the article ‘Science for the post-normal age’
presently the most cited paper of the journal. A recent review of academic literature conducted on the
Web of Science
The Web of Science (WoS; previously known as Web of Knowledge) is a paid-access platform that provides (typically via the internet) access to multiple databases that provide reference and citation data from academic journals, conference proceedi ...
and encompassing the topics of Futures studies, Foresight, Forecasting and Anticipation Practice
identifies the same paper as "the all-time publication that received the highest number of citations".
Content
"At birth Post-normal science was conceived as an inclusive set of robust insights more than as an exclusive fully structured theory or field of practice".
[Funtowicz, S., 2016, personal correspondence.] Some of the ideas underpinning PNS can already be found in a work published in 1983 and entitled "Three types of risk assessment: a methodological analysis"
This and subsequent works
show that PNS concentrates on few aspects of the complex relation between science and policy: the communication of uncertainty, the assessment of quality, and the justification and practice of the extended peer communities.
Coming to the PNS diagram (figure above) the horizontal axis represents ‘Systems Uncertainties’ and the vertical one ‘Decision Stakes’. The three quadrants identify Applied Science, Professional Consultancy, and Post-Normal Science. Different standards of quality and styles of analysis are appropriate to different regions in the diagram, i.e. post-normal science does not claim relevance and cogency on all of science's application but only on those defined by the PNS's
mantram with a fourfold challenge: ‘facts uncertain, values in dispute, stakes high and decisions urgent’. For applied research science's own peer quality control system will suffice (or so was assumed at the moment PNS was formulated in the early nineties), while professional consultancy was considered appropriate for these settings which cannot be ‘peer-reviewed’, and where the skills and the tacit knowledge of a practitioner are needed at the forefront, e.g. in a surgery room, or in a house on fire. Here a surgeon or a firefighter takes a difficult technical decision based on her or his training and appreciation of the situation (the Greek concept of ‘
Metis’ as discussed by J. C. Scott.
)
Complexity
There are important linkages between PNS and complexity science,
[Rees, M., 2017, Black holes are simpler than forests and science has its limits]
AEON, 1 December
e.g. system ecology (
C. S. Holling) and hierarchy theory (
Arthur Koestler), see e.g. the work of
Joseph Tainter,
Timothy F. H. Allen and Thomas W. Hoekstra on transition from fossil to renewable fuels.
In PNS, complexity is respected through its recognition of a multiplicity of legitimate perspectives on any issue; this is close to the meaning espoused by
Robert Rosen (theoretical biologist).
Reflexivity is realised through the extension of accepted ‘facts’ beyond the supposedly objective productions of traditional research. Also, the new participants in the process are not treated as passive learners at the feet of the experts, being coercively convinced through scientific demonstration. Rather, they will form an ‘extended peer community’, sharing the work of quality assurance of the scientific inputs to the process, and arriving at a resolution of issues through debate and dialogue.
The necessity to embrace complexity in a post-normal perspective to understand and face
zoonoses is argumented by David Waltner-Toews.
Extended peer community
In PNS extended peer communities are spaces where perspectives, values, styles of knowing and power differentials are expressed in a context of inequalities and conflict. Resolutions, compromises and knowledge co-production are contingent and not necessarily achievable.
Applications
Beside its dominating influence in the literature on 'futures',
[Thomas Gauthier, Sylvaine Mercuri Chapuis, 2018, An Investigation of Futures Studies Scholarly Literature, In: Poli R. (eds) Handbook of Anticipation. Springer, Cham] PNS is considered to have influenced the ecological ‘conservation versus preservation debate’, especially via its reading by American pragmatis
Bryan G. Norton According to Jozef Keulartz
the PNS concept of "extended peer community" influenced how Norton's developed his 'convergence hypothesis'. The hypothesis posits that ecologists of different orientation will converge once they start thinking 'as a mountain', or as a planet. For Norton this will be achieved via deliberative democracy, which will pragmatically overcome the black and white divide between conservationists and preservationists. More recently it has been argued that conservation science, embedded as it is in a multi-layered governance structures of policy-makers, practitioners, and stakeholders, is itself an 'extended peer community', and as a result conservation has always been ‘post-normal’.
Other authors attribute to PNS the role of having stimulated the take up of transdisciplinary methodological frameworks, reliant on the social constructivist perspective embedded in PNS.
Post-normal science is intended as applicable to most instances where the use of evidence is contested due to different norms and values. Typical instances are in the use of
evidence based policy and in
evaluation
In common usage, evaluation is a systematic determination and assessment of a subject's merit, worth and significance, using criteria governed by a set of Standardization, standards. It can assist an organization, program, design, project or any o ...
.
As summarized in a recent work "the ideas and concepts of post normal science bring about the emergence of new problem solving strategies in which the role of science is appreciated in its full context of the complexity and the uncertainty of natural systems and the relevance of human commitments and values."
For Peter Gluckman (2014), chief science advisor to the Prime Minister of New Zealand, post-normal science approaches are today appropriate for a host of problems including "eradication of exogenous pests
�� offshore oil prospecting, legalization of recreational psychotropic drugs, water quality, family violence, obesity, teenage morbidity and suicide, the ageing population, the prioritization of early-childhood education, reduction of agricultural greenhouse gases, and balancing economic growth and environmental sustainability".
Conservation science is also a field where PNS is suggested as to fill the space between research, policy, and implementation, as well as to ensure pluralism in analysis. Ecosystem services are a topical subject for PNS.
Reviews of the history and evolution of PNS, its definitions, conceptualizations,
and uses can be found in Turnpenny et al., 2011,
and in The Routledge Handbook of Ecological Economics (Nature and Society).
Articles on PNS are published in
Nature
Nature is an inherent character or constitution, particularly of the Ecosphere (planetary), ecosphere or the universe as a whole. In this general sense nature refers to the Scientific law, laws, elements and phenomenon, phenomena of the physic ...
and related journals.
Criticism
A criticism of post-normal science is offered by Weingart (1997)
for whom post-normal science does not introduce a new epistemology but retraces earlier debates linked to the so-called "finalization thesis". For Jörg Friedrichs
– comparing the issues of climate change and peak energy – an extension of the peer community has taken place in the climate science community, transforming climate scientists into ‘stealth advocates’,
while scientists working on energy security – without PNS, would still maintain their credentials of neutrality and objectivity. Another criticism is that the extended peer community's use undermines the
scientific method
The scientific method is an Empirical evidence, empirical method for acquiring knowledge that has been referred to while doing science since at least the 17th century. Historically, it was developed through the centuries from the ancient and ...
's use of empiricism and that its goal would be better addressed by providing greater science education.
The crisis of science
It has been argued
that post-normal science scholars have been prescient in anticipating the present crisis in science's quality control and reproducibility. A group of scholars of post-normal science orientation has published in 2016 a volume on the topic,
[Benessia, A., Funtowicz, S., Giampietro, M., Guimarães Pereira, A., Ravetz, J., Saltelli, A., Strand, R., van der Sluijs, J., 2016. The Rightful Place of Science: Science on the Verge. The Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes at Arizona State University.] discussing ''inter alia'' what this community perceive as the root causes of the present
science's crisis.
[Ravetz, J., 2016]
How should we treat science's growing pains? The Guardian, 8 June 2016
Quantitative approaches
Among the quantitative styles of analysis which make reference to post-normal science one can mention
NUSAP for numerical information,
sensitivity auditing for indicators and mathematical modelling,
Quantitative storytelling for exploring multiple frames in a quantitative analysis, and
MUSIASEM in the field of social metabolism. A work where these approaches are suggested for sustainability is in.
Mathematical modelling
In relation to mathematical modelling post-normal science suggests a participatory approach, whereby ‘models to predict and control the future’ are replaced by ‘models to map our ignorance about the future’, in the process exploring and revealing the metaphors embedded in the model.
PNS is also known for its definition of garbage in, garbage out (GIGO): in modelling GIGO occurs when the uncertainties in the inputs must be suppressed, lest the outputs become completely indeterminate.
COVID-19
On 25 March 2020, in the midst of the
COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic (also known as the coronavirus pandemic and COVID pandemic), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), began with an disease outbreak, outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China, in December ...
, a group of scholars of post-normal orientation published on the blog section of the
STEPS Centre (for Social, Technological and Environmental Pathways to Sustainability) at the
University of Sussex
The University of Sussex is a public university, public research university, research university located in Falmer, East Sussex, England. It lies mostly within the city boundaries of Brighton and Hove. Its large campus site is surrounded by the ...
. The piece
argues that the COVID-19 emergency has all the elements of a post-normal science context, and notes that "this pandemic offers society an occasion to open a fresh discussion on whether we now need to learn how to do science in a different way".
Special issues
The journa
''FUTURES''devoted several specials issues to post-normal science.
* The first was in 1999 and included two editorial pieces, from
Jerome Ravetz and
Silvio Funtowicz, and from
Jerome Ravetz.
* The second special issue, edited by
Merryl Wyn Davies, was entitled "Post normal times" in 2011. This was a selection of papers from the symposium "Post Normal Science – perspectives & prospectives 26-27th June 2009, Oxford." A summary of the abstracts can be found on th
NUSAP net
* The third special issue on post-normal science was in 2017. This special issue contains a selection of papers discussed at the
University of Bergen
The University of Bergen () is a public university, public research university in Bergen, Norway. As of 2021, the university had over 4,000 employees and 19,000 students. It was established by an act of parliament in 1946 consolidating several sci ...
's Centre for the Study of the Sciences and the Humanities between 2014 and 2016. The issue includes also two extended commentaries on the present crisis in science and the post-fact/post-truth discourse, one from Europe
and one from Japan.
Another special issue on post-normal science was published in 2011 on the journal ''
Science, Technology, & Human Values''.
References
Bibliography
*
*
*Funtowicz, S.O. and J.R. Ravetz (1990). ''
Uncertainty and Quality in Science for Policy''. Kluwer Academic Publishers, the Netherlands.
*
External links
NUSAP.neton
The Guardian
''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in Manchester in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'' and changed its name in 1959, followed by a move to London. Along with its sister paper, ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardi ...
14 March 2007
More articles on PNSReportfrom Secretariat of the
International Seabed Authority about "post-normal science for recalibration of policy instruments."
{{DEFAULTSORT:Post-Normal Science
Scientific method
Philosophy of science
Science and technology studies