I agree with and have had considerable experience with Ned's approach to
using science to promote evidence-based decision making.  As a member of our
state chapter of The Wildlife Society, an organization of professional
wildlife managers and researchers, I have been active on our chapter's
legislative and government affairs team for several years. Our goal is to
use science to inform legislators, commissioners, and other policy makers so
they can use this science to take effective action.  We are not lobbyists.
We rely on scientific fact, not opinion, to  inform decision makers and
advocate science-based action.  Here's a lead paragraph exemplifying how we
usually introduce our correspondence, testimonies and conversations with
decision makers:

 

'The Oregon Chapter of The Wildlife Society represents over 250 wildlife
professionals in Oregon. Our chapter's goals include providing science-based
information on wildlife issues to aid public discussion of natural resource
management and promoting the application of sound science in resource
management policy and decision making. As a society of wildlife
professionals, the use of good science is our cornerstone principle."

 

Over the years our involvement has resulted in a number of positive and
effective decisions improving or protecting the scientific management of
wildlife resources.  We met with legislators and agency leaders to inform
and listen.  We sent written statements and presented oral testimony to
legislative committees and agency commissions.

So my suggestion would be to work through professional organizations to
organize action teams such as what I've worked with, or partner up with
several colleagues to organize an ad hoc team, or at least take action as an
individual to meet with, correspond with, and/or testify before decision
makers.  Emphasize your science base and put aside your personal opinion.  

And maybe you shouldn't waste time and energy marching down the street with
a sign that says "Science Works" - you may be just blocking traffic,
annoying bystanders, creating division, and redefining science as just
another societal splinter group (as some would like it to be).

 

Warren W. Aney

TWS Certified Wildlife Biologist

ESA Certified Senior Ecologist

Tigard, Oregon

 

From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kennedy Rubert
Sent: 22 April, 2017 17:30
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Does Marching Delegitimize Science?

 

One can certainly be involved with science advocacy and making contacts with
decision-makers through the traditional routes, such as writing to
legislators/executives, testifying at public hearings, writing op-ed pieces,
and volunteering for various political action groups. 

 

Moving ahead, I believe there is great strength in cultivating partnerships
between scientists, educators, legislators, and various grassroots
organizations who share a common mission of serving the public good. Some of
these people/groups have stronger political motives than others--and as
scholars we are prepared to rationally choose who we interact with and in
what context. A key point to building these relationships is to have a
clear, centrist message and set of goals upon which all involved parties can
achieve consensus. I believe the "scientific method" and "evidence-based
decision-making" are among the messages that can fulfill these criteria.
I've been working with several members of the ESA to coordinate  events at
the upcoming Portland conference that aim to strengthen partnerships between
scientists and people/organizations outside of academia with a common focus
on environmental quality/public welfare. Several other major organizations,
including the Planetary Health Alliance, Union of Concerned Scientists, and
(I think) the American Geophysical Union are engaged in similar endeavors.

 

--
Kennedy "Ned" F. Rubert-Nason, Ph.D.


Assistant Scientist - University of Wisconsin-Madison 

Chemistry Instructor - Madison College

Chair - Inclusive Ecology section-Ecological Society of America
839 Russell Laboratories
1630 Linden Drive
Madison, WI 53706
office: 608-262-4319

cell: 608-234-1321

 

 

  _____  

From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
<[email protected]> on behalf of Aaron T. Dossey
<[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, April 22, 2017 1:39 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Does Marching Delegitimize Science? 

 


I definitely agree with a lot of what I've seen in this thread, as I
understand it.  Marches and protests are certainly fun and high visibility,
but fleeting.  I think the heavy lifting, grunt work, thankless tasks,
"boring" minutia of politics, advocacy, lobbying toward positive change have
the most impact.  Like anything else I guess, the periods of energy, fun and
glory are best as the RESULT of the less entertaining work.  If those things
exist without the work, it's just a party and won't change much. 

Do any of you have recommendations for getting involved with advocacy and
making contacts with decision makers, either as groups or individuals? 

I began following, reading about and contacting the original organizers back
I believe in February or so when they first started.  I presume this was
largely inspired and modeled after the women's march the day after Trump's
inauguration (I wish that event would have been the day of the inauguration
- seems it might have been more effective). 

Since then from what I have seen and read, I've been concerned that the
organizers of the March for Science were pushing more of a left wing social
agenda than actual science advocacy (or at least half of one and half the
other).  Conflation of issues is not only counter-productive, but also one
of the worst aspects of political parties (or as our founding generations
called them "factions").  Organizing is obviously critical to wield powder
toward change, but I also believe issue based focus is critical for success.
Conflating social issues with science funding, education funding, productive
utilization of science and mathematics as part of good policy formulation,
etc. I strongly feel dilutes the effort and drives many people away.  (I for
one was turned off, and frankly offended, by the original March for Science
web site.)  Just because someone supports plank X in a platform doesn't mean
they will support Y, Z, alpha, zeta... etc.  That, along with efficient time
and resource use, is part of why focus is critical.  To touch on the
partisan elements of this, I believe strongly that issue conflation has been
working against the democratic party's success for at least a decade or more
- both directly and indirectly.  (for longer, the conflation of oppression
by the rich vs government, or just false equating of "both political
parties"). ... but I digress (sort of)

Also singular events (like protests and marches etc.) tend to be a bit flash
in the pan and have limited lasting impact on positive change.  Sort of like
what I call "conference euphoria" when we (often as graduate students) have
a series of Kumbayah moments and fascinating conversations and plans for
collaboration during conferences, with corresponding notes taken in
proceedings books... yet within 1-2 weeks after all are forgotten without
any follow-up (reality sets in and it's back to the grind).  



On 4/18/2017 4:20 PM, Judith Weis wrote:

If bookburning was going on throughout the country, would literature
scholars be justified in protesting? Or would they be perceived as being
biased and not objective?


  _____  


From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
<mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]> on behalf of
John A.  <mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 18, 2017 7:10:33 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Does Marching Delegitimize Science? 

 

    I would like to know if anyone else is concerned whether scientists
participating in a march, which is inherently political, may further erode
public confidence in science as objective and nonpartisan.

    It seems to me that given the current climate, any march in protest of
specific policies runs the risk of being seen-or misrepresented-as an attack
on the majority party, which would only further reinforce certain
stereotypes of scientists, and make it all the easier for politicians to
dismiss them as just another special-interest group that can be safely
ignored.

    The fact is that a march presents no rational arguments, invites no
constructive dialogue and changes no minds.  The format of a march lends
itself to confrontation and exclusion-the very opposite of the successful
engagement which science so desperately needs.  Worse, it surrenders any
message to interpretation by the media, and may ultimately serve to
trivialize the very issues the marchers had thought to support.

    I have to wonder at the effect on science policy, if every person who
had planned to march instead scheduled meetings with their senator,
representative and local state delegate.  A face-to-face meeting in a quiet
office or conference room, without the noise and shouting of a protest
march, has a far better chance to be effective.  Politicians can always
shrug off a thirty-second clip on the news, especially if it shows chanting,
drumming and handwritten cardboard signs.  But when local constituents
schedule an appointment and present their concerns like professionals, the
information has a better chance of being considered and remembered.

    Not all politicians will make themselves available, to their discredit;
but for those that do, a face-to-face meeting opens the prospect of real
dialogue and follow-up contacts, with the potential for long-term exchange.
I would suggest that this sort of patient, personal and nonconfrontational
approach may be far more valuable to the scientific community than
participating in a brief event which is structurally incapable of presenting
complex concerns with the nuance they deserve.

 
Respectfully,

 
J. A.

 

 

ATD of ATB and ISI
-- 
Aaron T. Dossey, Ph.D.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Founder/Owner: All Things Bugs LLC
Capitalizing on Low-Crawling Fruit from Insect-Based Innovation
ABOUT: http://allthingsbugs.com/People
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