Cite as: Morales Ramirez, Alberto. 2018. "Caminata por la Ciencia [Walk for Science]" in STS Across Borders Digital Exhibit, edited by Aalok Khandekar and Kim Fortun. Society for Social Studies of Science. August. http://stsinfrastructures.org/content/caminata-por-la-ciencia-walk-science.
In April 2017, scientists from countries around the world joined in the March for Science (MfS). Sparked by the Trump administration’s various science- and environmental- policy changes in the United States and by the menace of substantial budget cuts to scientific research globally, diverse scientific communities took their local streets to march for science in what has become a global social movement.
Panamanian scientists, from various disciplines and scientific sectors, joined thousands of science supporters around the world by rallying down the Amador Causeway on the Pacific entrance of the Panama Canal to call attention to multiple issues surrounding public funding of scientific research and science education both locally and in Latin American.
At this demonstration, many supporters carried signs with the following messages:
Sin Ciencia, no hay Futuro
[There is no future without science]
Ciencia es Futuro
[Science is Future]
Creando Conciencia
[Creating Conscience/Awareness, with a pun in Spanish "Con +ciencia" = "Creating With Science"]
Exigimos politicas publicas basadas en evidencia.
[We demand public policy based on evidence.]
Mas ciencia, menos violencia.
[More science, less violence]
Apoyar la ciencia, es apoyor nuestro futuro.
[To support science, is to help/support our future.]
In what ways did scientists and science supporters conceptualize and articulate differently the March for Science (MfS) in manifestations of this global social movement? In other words, what local meanings and discourses wrapped around these demonstrations worldwide? How do knowledge events, like the MfS, shift our Science and Technology Studies (STS) perspectives and analytical frames, notably when an epistemological community of scientists becomes or finds itself transformed into a social movement?
The following photo essay asks us to simultaneously think about science and technology’s aspiration for ubiquity in today's emerging global knowledge economy and how differential socioeconomic and historical-political trajectories interplay with the formation of scientific assemblages and their associated knowledge events. It addresses the following analytical questions: