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The data presented is collated, scraped, RTI-sourced and crowdsourced. The journalism, the data gathering, and civic engagement is supported by grants and reader funding only.
While the reach of OpenCity is limited to Bengaluru, it reflects civic problems and government red-taping in any other city. As a city grows, problems like poor quality of roads, garbage not being picked up, lack of dependable piped water supply, the traffic, schooling, challenges of opening a small business arise and they are not endemic in Bengaluru. Analysis of problem-solution/reaction in one city can help develop resources adaptive to any other city.
OpenCity works on core principles of citizen-science, with the society contributing to the information presented and consuming the same information on governance to be more proactive.
Knorr Cetina's challenge to the limitations of the first approach though revisited throughout the paper is provided an alternative by her illustrating the aspects of the 'rational action as practiced' approach in the analysis of lab experiments in particle physics and molecular biology. However this analysis if first primed by her elaborating on the features of the said approach, in this key move made by Knorr Cetina is replacing the notion of the outcome has holding epistemic or rational value, with the that of having a sense of having a truth-finding objective. Now rationality is deployed to achieve an objective and thus can be traced in its method of deployment. With the move from value to objective, Knorr Cetina renders the lab space into a social argument, with actors and mechanisms working towards institutionalized function. However, she does not lose sight of the intricate complexity lab space nor the weight of the claim made by its outcomes. She manages this by bolstering the notion of the 'epistemic' thus placing knowledge creation and function front and center of all analysis. The subtler move made here is epistemology is less analogies to notions of rationality as mere idea's of knowledge was, a coupling solidified within the reason as resource approach. This separation followed by a connecting of rationality to context, a significate limitation of the former approach as elaborated by the author. The context was always seen to have an external influence on rational choices but was never insignificant in the internal situation of choosing. This is rectified through promoting the hollowed out notion of context to the operations of culture. The idea of culture encompasses action, though, and tradition, all bound by situation and intent. Thus the actions taken in the lab, with their goal of truth finding, are read through the lens of culture, binding reason to the contextual dissection and arrangements being made. The agenda here is to achieve a more compressive understanding of reasoning bound by its connection to situation and knowledge and not as an ideal operation.
Taking from this idea of lab studies as 'change', Knorr Cetina's crucial thesis is that there a shift from "the context of justification" to "the context of discovery" which lab studies is emblematic of. Through this Knorr Cetina differentiates lab studies from the study of experiments, which was the main focus in the ''context of justification". Knorr Cetina treats this change as both a drawing of attention to aspects of knowledge hitherto overlooked, and as redrawing of as knowledge convicted and created.
What is key here is that lab studies offer key methodologies that make and sustain such a shift in understanding. Given that this is a chapter introducing lab studies, the method is to trace these methodological features of lab studies systematically and each features epistemic or ontological implications on knowledge. What is of note here is that the lab is a condition of scientific knowledge production and is thus more than the operation principles of an experiment. Thus 'lab' is as much a toll of lab studies as it is the title object.