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Experiences and expertise of codependency: Repetition, claim-coupling, and enthusiasm
Stockholm University, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Public Health Sciences.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5576-0600
2019 (English)In: Public Understanding of Science, ISSN 0963-6625, E-ISSN 1361-6609, Vol. 28, no 2, p. 146-160Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Arenas where experts interact with publics are useful platforms for communication and interaction between actors in the field of public health: researchers, practitioners, clinicians, patients, and laypersons. Such coalitions are central to the analysis of knowledge coproduction. This study investigates an initiative for assembling expert and other significant knowledge which seeks to create better interventions and solutions to addiction-related problems, in this case codependency. But what and whose knowledge is communicated, and how? The study explores how processes of repetition, claim-coupling, and enthusiasm produce a community based on three boundary beliefs: (1) victimized codependent children failed by an impaired society; (2) the power of daring and sharing; and (3) the (brain) disease model as the scientific representative and explanation for (co)dependence. These processes have legitimized future hopes in certain suffering actors, certain lived and professional expertise and also excluded social scientific critique, existing interventions, and alternative accounts.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2019. Vol. 28, no 2, p. 146-160
Keywords [en]
codependency, interaction experts/publics, lived expertise, public participation, science communication, studies of science and technology
National Category
Sociology
Research subject
Sociology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-158750DOI: 10.1177/0963662518792807ISI: 000456433700002OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-158750DiVA, id: diva2:1238477
Projects
Kunskapsproduktion, kommunikation och användning. Biomedicinsk alkoholforskning som ett framväxande kunskapsfält
Funder
Forte, Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and WelfareAvailable from: 2018-08-13 Created: 2018-08-13 Last updated: 2022-02-26Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Everybody knows?: Conversational coproduction in communication of addiction expertise
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Everybody knows?: Conversational coproduction in communication of addiction expertise
2019 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

The coproduction idiom within Science and Technology Studies (STS) centers on how science and society produce knowledge together. The current thesis explores expert communication – which is immersed in the relationship between science and society – as a case for understanding such coproducing processes. Expert communication is often characterized as a democratic initiative of knowledge enlightenment. But we know less about the consequences that communication initiatives bring. For instance, while groups of publics and experts are large and heterogeneous, expert communication often involves simplified and dichotomized relationships between these groups. The aim of this thesis is to understand the practice of expert communication in terms of how expertise is communicated and received. Who gets to represent experts and publics, in what ways and in which situations, and how do they engage with expertise?

Expert communication takes place in all kinds of fields. The focus of this thesis is communication of addiction expertise. The addiction field makes a suitable case for studying co-constitutive practices of communication, as it is broad and disparate, and filled with different contradictory perspectives, actors and relations. The current study explores communication of addiction expertise through three cases that involve different types of experts and publics, as well as different dimensions of the expert/public relationships and of communication as a process of coproduction: Newspaper readers’ interpretations of media representations of biomedical addiction expertise, conference participants’ collaboration within a conference on codependency, and civil servants’ and politicians’ interaction within county council committee meetings. Drawing on STS approaches of coproduction of knowledge and classical sociological conversation analysis, the thesis explores questions of how, what, and whose knowledge is communicated and received, and what activities and actors are involved in these processes. A specific focus is put on how sociability in the form of conversational routines is productive, as sociability carries expertise and establishes relations between actors involved in coproducing processes of communication.

Publics are not only recipients of expertise but also active enablers of how expertise comes into being in the everyday society, as publics engage with expertise through filtering and intertwining expertise through and with their personal experiences. Expertise, at least regarding human and social activities such as addiction, is thus bound to everyday experiences and lives. It is also shown how certain expertise, certain experiences, and certain actors and victims of addiction related problems are included while others are excluded. For example, biomedical explanations such as the reward system and the brain disease model seem to co-exist well with peoples’ personal experiences in contrast to social scientific explanations. Moreover, certain actors manage to draw on personal experiences in multiple roles as both experts and publics. Introducing the concept of conversational coproduction, the studies also highlight the sociability and conversational routines involved in expert communication as crucial for (de)establishing relations and making expertise flow or freeze in local coproducing processes as well as for understanding consequences of expert communication and its relation to public participation and democracy.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm: Department of Sociology, Stockholm University, 2019. p. 89
Series
Stockholm studies in sociology, ISSN 0491-0885 ; 76
Keywords
conversational coproduction, coproduction of knowledge, science and technology studies, expert communication, science communication, public participation, publics, experts, addiction, codependency, media, politics, conversation analysis, biomedicalization
National Category
Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
Research subject
Sociology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-168261 (URN)978-91-7797-717-9 (ISBN)978-91-7797-718-6 (ISBN)
Public defence
2019-06-14, William-Olssonsalen, Geovetenskapens hus, Svante Arrhenius väg 14, Stockholm, 10:00 (Swedish)
Opponent
Supervisors
Projects
Knowledge production, communication and utilization; Biomedical alcohol research as an emerging field of knowledge
Funder
Forte, Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare, 2012-0691
Note

At the time of the doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 3: Manuscript.

Available from: 2019-05-22 Created: 2019-04-29 Last updated: 2022-02-26Bibliographically approved

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