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British Science Association

Countdown is on to British Science Festival in Southampton Insight into action – exploring the Public Attitudes to Science Survey Celebrating British Science Week 6-15 March 2026 British Science Association selected as the future host of EDIS APPG on Diversity & Inclusion in STEM launches new project on AI equity Smashing Stereotypes is back for British Science Week 2026 Guest blog: Community Led Research Pilot, funder’s reflections Public Attitudes to Science Survey shows the public values science, but highlights concerns over AI, quality of information, and representation Sir Roland Jackson Putting communities in the driving seat: report explores impact of participatory research Dr Alex Lathbridge and Karen Blake MBE named British Science Association Honorary Fellows 2025: Our past year, wrapped A-Level student builds highly-accurate budget Sign-Language-to-speech wrist technology A cautious welcome for key recommendations in Curriculum and Assessment Review Confidence and support to teach science has fallen, primary education report suggests 'It’s through change that science progresses’: Disabled staff in science and medicine lead action for equity Reflections on the British Science Festival in Liverpool Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge's presidential address Report highlights disconnect between data collection and action on EDI in UK science and tech sector CREST website upgraded to transform STEM learning and empower educators across the UK Robo-chemists, eye-trackers and a VR fishing boat: the last day of the British Science Festival 2025 Phages, geophonics and prosthetics: the fourth day of British Science Festival 2025 Whale song, urban farming and science comedy: the third day of the British Science Festival 2025 Climate solutions, pioneering women and particle detectors: the second day of the British Science Festival 2025 Chatbots, ghost particles and neurodiversity: the first day of the British Science Festival 2025 Supporting inclusive entrepreneurship and innovation among and through micro, small and medium sized enterprises (M-SMEs) CREST Awards now free for all young people in Scotland The power of plants: eight events to dig into at this year’s British Science Festival Five health and humanity highlights from this year’s British Science Festival Exploring the wonders of space: five unmissable British Science Festival events ‘Early and meaningful’ public involvement in shaping engineering biology research and policy vital What's it like to work at the British Science Festival as an Evaluations Assistant? Blackpool school pupil launches pop-up science museum and fundraiser in campaign against ‘science deserts’ British Science Festival in Liverpool programme launches Education | Keeping STEM learning going at home From Awareness to Action: Creating Authentic Neurodiversity Support in STEM Workplaces Baroness Brown appointed 2025-26 President of the British Science Association Education | Our Engage Teacher Conference 2025 round-up British Science Association Trustee awarded MBE Introducing our new Head of Marketing and Communications Navigating eco-anxiety in the face of the climate change crisis Education| Ten top tips for adapting resources for SEND learners Education| Adapting resources for SEND learners Announcing our British Science Festival 2025 Section Presidents British Science Festival 2025 Award Lecturers announced Education | British Science Week, CREST and going cross-curricular! British Science Association signs open letter on improving climate change education Education | Tips from ten-year-old Poppy and her mum on doing CREST Education | Ten-year-old Poppy explores STEM accessibility - a CREST case study Briefing on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion strategies in STEM makes business case for growth From WhatsApp Group to Nationwide Network: The Birth of the Afro-Caribbean Commercial Science Network ‘Creating knowledge together’ essay series explores power of community-engaged research ‘Action over optics’ - APPG event explores EDI strategies in STEM A celebration that highlights the crucial role of science in our lives British Science Association Council welcomes two new trustees Bringing back Smashing Stereotypes for its sixth year for British Science Week 2025 Science education vital for UK growth and fighting misinformation, British Science Week survey shows Where next for attitudes to science? UKRI, Ipsos, and the BSA announce launch of 2025 public attitudes to science survey British Science Association’s lead strategic partner UKRI welcomes new CEO The Ideas Fund awards £1.73m to community wellbeing projects For Thought | Science, innovation, and society: working together for long-term change Change and adapt for the better with the British Science Week 2025 activity packs! 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Education | Exploring reproductive health with CREST!
The Great Divide: What Brexit says about Science and the Public
2016-10-05 · via British Science Association

By Jacob Ohrvik- Stott, Project Officer (Cultural Development)

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Amidst the establishment’s post-Brexit soul searching, much attention has been paid to the ideological forces behind vote leave’s triumph. As the familiar story goes, a vote for Brexit is a protest vote. The referendum is no more than a proxy war between the haves and have-nots, with naïve vote-leavers cynically exploited by scaremongering ‘post-truth’ politics.

After the event, pro-remainers consoled themselves with the suggestion that leave voters were undergoing a collective buyer’s remorse, as news channels across the country broadcast footage of individual leave voters expressing sheepish regret

Much has also been made of the backgrounds of the two Brexit camps. Research suggests remainers are more cosmopolitan, more liberal and have higher incomes. On the other side of the coin, leave voters are older, more likely to be born in the UK and less likely to have experienced the enlightening forces of higher education. The battle lines are clear: north vs south, young vs old, working class vs the intelligentsia.

Common in all of these narratives is the picture they paint of those that voted to leave. The motivations for over half the UK’s voting population wanting to leave the EU are presented as flawed, with the implication being that leave voters are rash, impressionable and uninformed. Aside from the lazy stereotype, such analyses have a profound and worrying effect on the ways we choose to address the deep cultural divides Brexit has revealed.

For science, the idea that the public’s hostility towards the scientific establishment is the result of lack of education is not a new one. In this model, public mistrust of science is caused by a ‘knowledge deficit’, to be cured by simply providing scientific education to the masses. Despite the wide-spread consensus that this approach to engaging the public with science is ineffectual, the Brexit vote risks resurrecting these outdated and inhibiting ideas, undoing the progress that has been made by the scientific community in opening up science to society.

To halt this regression into a one-way ‘deficit’ model of communication, the British Science Association believes science needs to reassess the ways in which we involve our communities in science. In our response to the Science and Technology Select Committee’s Leaving the EU: implications and opportunities for science and research consultation, we call for a reinterpretation of what Brexit means for the public and science, and outline an approach to embedding public involvement in science.

We believe that the concerns of leave voters are justified, and reflect a wider disconnect between the UK’s science community and the rest of the population. Rather than seeking to convince the public that scientists are right, we should be exploring the views of those that feel disconnected with science, and working with them to build trusting and mutually beneficial relationships. Exploring these social chasms may not be easy, and we will need to ask some tough questions of ourselves. Are we doing all we can to make British science as diverse as Britain itself? Is science elitist? Do we want science to be the preserve of a scientific class, or should it be a fundamental part of our culture?

We believe science is stronger working with the public than apart from it, and that public involvement with science will create the conditions needed for it to flourish. There is a key role for scientific institutions to play in championing public engagement, and we suggest a number of measures which could play a part in doing so.

We should prioritise public engagement in research institutions, and fund programmes that promote public-led discussions around research and science policy decisions. The scientific community should also expand and diversify, opening its doors to collaborative, community-based research and including non-scientists on the boards of research councils.

As a community we need to listen to the public, and engage in a deep dialogue to explore their views on the scientific issues on their horizons. Until we build mutual respect and understanding divisions will remain in our society, in or out of the EU.

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The British Science Association’s full response to the Science and Technology Select Committee’s Leaving the EU: implications and opportunities for science and research consultation can be read here.