Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes celebrates 25 years


Jack Stilgoe, seated, speaks to an unseen audience

Jack Stilgoe, professor of science and technology policy at University College London, examines anticipatory governance and responsible innovation in science and technology. Photo courtesy of Hager Sharp

For Arizona State University's Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes (CSPO), recognizing the past is just as important as designing the future. The consortium marked 25 years in Washington, D.C., in early December by celebrating its legacy of connecting diverse groups to key issues in science and technology policy.

The celebration — buzzing with scientists, past and present policymakers, and innovative thinkers — began with a panel featuring CSPO’s Director Emeritus Dan Sarewitz and Associate Vice Provost for Discovery, Engagement and Outcomes David Guston.

The germ that became CSPO was an unusual congressional testimony that had an impact on Sarewitz, who was working on Capitol Hill in the 1990s in the health science community.

“There was this guy who was unique among all people we ever had testifying,” Sarewitz said. “He said publicly that the problem for science is not about how much money it has but about how we organize the institutions for spending that money. That guy was Michael Crow.”

That initial experience began a series of encounters and discussions that grew to become CSPO. Although not president of ASU at that time, President Crow’s PhD in science and technology policy showed that his tie to CSPO was — and always had been — personal.

“This was enabled by ... good fortune that I connected with Michael Crow, but also the fact that there was someone who was willing to put resources into this from the beginning and who saw the key problem, which was that science policy in the U.S. was entirely input driven,” Sarewitz said. “It was about how much money went into institutions; it was not driven by any tools or careful thinking about what you were or could achieve through those investments.”

Sarewitz’ and Crow’s ideas — along with the ideas of many others, many of whom were in attendance at the celebration — are what created the consortium. Crow himself spoke at the celebration, taking a red-eye flight to the nation’s capital to address attendees.

When beginning CSPO at Columbia University, Crow said that he envisioned a shift in focus in how scientists engaged with the broader public. “We’ve got to focus on this: science comma policy and outcomes,” Crow said. “It's not science policy. It’s science, policy and outcomes, with the key word really being outcomes.”

For Crow, the crux of CSPO was about focusing on real outcomes that real people wanted and working to provide the scientific research needed to inform the policy that helped create those outcomes.

“We needed to start thinking about what were we going to do with all of this power that science enabled,” Crow said. “Were we going to truly build a better society?”

And for the future, Crow noted that many parts of the U.S. face significant challenges in key policy dimensions, including education, quality of health and income.

“There's no forward progress,” Crow said. “They send their kids to college. They don't graduate, and they have debt. More than half the people that have gone to college in the United States have no diploma, but debt. Three-fourths of the people with debt have no certificate of any type. This is trillions of dollars.”

Crow hopes that the consortium can help work toward more positive outcomes, including improving how scientists and policymakers communicate with each other as well as the community they are both working to benefit.

“We have to find a better translation language,” Crow said. “The academic-speak, the science-speak, the technology-speak is too much know-it-all. ... What we have to figure out on the outcome side is not just the outcome of science and technology, but the means by which in our democracy that we actually go to great lengths to understand how to communicate.”

At the center of CSPO is a desire for democratic outcomes — outcomes that are fairly contested and equally decided.

“CSPO exists to help build collaborations, to carry out new projects, to do research, but also to convene this community,” said Arthur Daemmrich, CSPO’s current director, when opening the day’s events.

And the celebration did just that. Through panels with esteemed speakers and breakout groups full of ideas pushing the boundaries of what’s to come, the celebration was also a vibrant exploration of what the next 25 years could bring. And while much is still unknown, the consensus among leaders at the celebration was that the future is bright, and that the consortium’s work was far from done.

“Do I wish (CSPO) was 50 times bigger? Yeah, sure,” Crow said. “But alive is better than being dead.”

For more information about the full schedule at CSPO @ 25, visit Arizona State University’s Consortium on Science, Policy & Outcomes online.

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