ABSTRACT

Current debates about experts are often polarized and based on mistaken assumptions, with expertise either defended or denigrated. Making Sense of Expertise instead proposes a conceptual framework for the study of expertise in order to facilitate a more nuanced understanding of the role of expertise in contemporary society.

Too often different meanings of experts and expertise are implied without making them explicit. Grundmann’s approach to expertise is based on a synthesis of approaches that exist in various fields of knowledge. The book aims at dispelling much of the confusion by offering a comprehensive and rigorous framework for the study of expertise. A series of in-depth case studies drawn from contemporary issues, including the climate crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic, provide the empirical basis of the author’s comprehensive approach.

This thought-provoking book will be of great interests to students, instructors and researchers in a range of fields in the humanities, social sciences, and science and technology studies.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part |58 pages

Part I

chapter 8Chapter 1|9 pages

A General Concept of Expertise

chapter Chapter 2|14 pages

Expertise in STS

chapter Chapter 3|7 pages

The Power of the Professions

chapter Chapter 4|8 pages

Predicting the Future

chapter Chapter 5|11 pages

The Politics of Knowledge

chapter Chapter 6|7 pages

Expertise and Economics

part |80 pages

Part II

chapter 66Chapter 7|23 pages

The IPCC

A Chameleon of Expertise

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

Covid, Expertise, and Society

Stepping Out of the Shadow of Epidemiology?

chapter Chapter 9|36 pages

The Challenge to Professional Expertise

part |29 pages

Part III

chapter 146Chapter 10|7 pages

Conclusion

chapter Chapter 11|20 pages

Afterword: Governance, Democracy, and Social Change