Skip to content
Guest Thinkers

Talk @ Swedish Embassy: The Paradigm Shift in Sci Comm

Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter
A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people

Next week on Wednesday I will be joined by several stellar panelists for a Science Cafe discussion at the Swedish Embassy aka the House of Sweden. Built last year, the embassy is an architectural marvel sitting on some of the best real estate in the Georgetown waterfront.

You don’t want to miss this. I hear that they are expecting an audience topping a 100 and I am sure people will be gathering afterwards to go out for beers in Georgetown. Details below. Notice the RSVP requirement.

For my talk, I will be discussing the paradigm shift in science communication, focusing in on the continued debate over evolution. the recent National Academies report on the topic, the forthcoming Ben Stein advocacy film, and the role of maverick communicators such as Richard Dawkins.

Public Understanding of Science
January 16, 2008

6:30 to 8:30 pm

Speakers:
–Jan Riise, Goteborg Center for Public Learning and Understanding of
Science
–Matthew C. Nisbet, Assistant Professor at American University, the School
of Communication

Moderator:
–Nils Bruzelius, Deputy National Editor/Science at the Washington Post

The cafes are a continuation of the 2007 Linnaeus Tercentenary
celebrations where Swedish and American researchers debate important
science & technology issues.

NOTES:
–you must RSVP for this one in advance because it takes place at an embassy:
Please RSVP by January 14th to rsvp-hos@foreign.ministry.se

-the street address (as opposed to the mailing address which does not work in the Metro Trip Planner) is 901 30th Street, NW, Washington, DC

Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter
A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people

Related
This essay describes a model for urban development that takes into account and makes use of the externalities that exist in the built environment. Buildings and the people that inhabitat them makes neighborhoods and vice versa the value of a building is in its locations. How can better frame this relationship between an object and its environment? How can develop strategies for a integral area development that learn from the best global examples?

Up Next