I was just reminded by Maarja Krustein of a concept I was messing around a while back, of getting people together to draft a new “oath for experts”.
I had great ambitions a few years back about this idea, about trying to
renovate what an expert ought to act like, to describe a shared
professional ethic for experts that would help us explain what our value
still might be in a crowdsourced, neoliberal moment. The Hippocratic
Oath is at least one of the reasons why many people still trust the
professionalism of doctors (and are so pointedly scandalized when it is
unambiguously violated).
We live in a moment where increasingly many people either believe
they can get “good enough” expertise from crowdsourced knowledge online
or where experts are all for sale to the highest bidder or will narrowly
conform their expertise to fit the needs of a particular ideology or
belief system.
I think in both cases these assumptions are still more untrue than
true. Genuine experts, people who have spent a lifetime studying
particular issues or questions, still know a great deal of value that
cannot be generated by crowdsourced systems–in fact, most crowdsourcing
consists of locating and highlighting such expertise rather than
spontaneously generating a comparable form of knowledge in response to
any query. I still think a great many experts, academic and otherwise,
remain committed to providing a fair, judicious accounting of what they
know even when that knowledge is discomforting to their own political or
economic interests.
Mind, you, crowdsourcing and other forms of networked knowledge are
nevertheless immensely valuable, and sometimes a major improvement over
the slow, expensive or fragile delivery of authoritative knowledge that
experts in the past could provide. Constructing accessible sources of
everyday reference in the pre-Internet world was a difficult, laborious
process.
It’s also undoubtedly true that there are experts who sell their
services in a crass way, without much regard for the craft of research
or study, to whomever is willing to pay. But this is why something like
an oath is necessary, and why I think everyone who depends upon being
viewed as a legitimate expert has a practical reason to join a
large-scale professional alliance designed to reinvigorate the
legitimacy of expertise. This is why professionalization happened during
the 20th Century, as groups of experts who shared a common training and
craft tried to delegitimate unscrupulous, predatory or dangerous forms
of pseudo-expertise and insist on rigorous forms of licensing. I don’t
think you can ever create a licensing system for something as broad as
expertise, but I do think you could expect a common ethic.
The last time I tried to put forward one plank of a plausible oath, I
made the mistake of picking an example that created more heat than
light. I might end up doing that again, perhaps by underestimating just
how many meal tickets this proposed oath might cancel. But let’s try a
few items that I personally would be glad to pledge, in the simplest and
most direct form that I can think of:
1) An expert should continuously disclose all organizations, groups
and companies to whom they have provided direct advice or counsel,
regardless of whether the provision of this advice was compensated or
freely given. All experts should maintain a permanent, public transcript
of such disclosures.
2) An expert should publically disclose all income received from
providing expert advice to clients other than their main employer. All
experts should insist that their main employer (university, think tank,
political action committee, research institute) disclose its major
sources of funding as well. The public should always know whether an
expert is paid significantly by an organization, committee, company or
group that directly benefits from that person’s expert knowledge.
3) Any expert providing testimony at a criminal or civil trial should
do so for free. No expert should be provided compensation directly or
indirectly for providing expert testimony. Any expert who serves as a
paid consultant for a plaintiff or a defendant should not provide expert
witness at a trial involving that client.
4) All experts should disclose findings, information or knowledge
that contradicts or challenge their own previous conclusions or
interpretation when that information becomes known to them in the course
of their own research or analysis. Much as newspapers are expected to
publish corrections, experts should be prepared to do the same.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar