The Guardian (USA)

Science hasn’t gone ‘woke’ – the only people meddling with it are the Tories

- Philip Ball

The science secretary, Michelle Donelan, told the Conservati­ve party conference this week that the Tories are “depolitici­sing science”. Or as a Conservati­ve party announceme­nt later put it, in case you didn’t get the culture-war reference, they are “kicking woke ideology out of science”, thereby “safeguardi­ng scientific research from the denial of biology and the steady creep of political correctnes­s”.

Scientists do not seem too delighted to be defended in this manner. “As a scientist, I really don’t know what this means,” tweeted Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, professor of psychology and cognitive neuroscien­ce at the University of Cambridge. “This is totally shocking and is something I never thought I would see in the UK,” said Buzz Baum, a molecular cell biologist for the Medical Research Council.

What exactly does Donelan think science needs protecting from? What is this woke threat? At the conference, she expanded on that. “Scientists are told by university bureaucrat­s that they cannot ask legitimate research questions about biological sex,” she claimed, adding that Keir Starmer thinks the “legitimate concerns of the scientific community” on these issues of sex and gender “don’t matter”. She said she will launch a review of the use of gender and sex questions in scientific research, apparently to be led by Alice Sullivan, a professor of sociology at University College London, which will be used to formulate guidance.

You would need to have been hiding under a rock not to appreciate that questions of sex and gender have become controvers­ial, bordering on incendiary, in some areas of academia. As a recent exchange by evolutiona­ry biologist Richard Dawkins and professor of humanities Jacqueline Rose in the New Statesman revealed, academics are often talking at cross-purposes: Dawkins defended the binary nature of human sexes from an evolutiona­ry angle, Rose the socially constructe­d aspects of gender identity.

On top of that, there are the complicati­ons of developmen­tal and cognitive biology, which, among other things, can produce intersex individual­s and conditions where, say, people with a Y chromosome can be anatomical­ly female.

But one doesn’t need to take a strong stand about rights or wrongs in these debates to recognise that they are difficult and subtle – and to acknowledg­e it is proper that they be rigorously discussed. Arguably, this is an

area where science can’t supply definitive answers to all the germane societal questions.

This is not a case of academic research being trammelled by an imposed ideology, but rather, of a range of differing views among academics themselves. Besides,rather than await clarificat­ion, Donelan has evidently formed her opinion already: she called guidance that data on sex should only be collected in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces “utter nonsense” and a “denial of biology”. What is the point of a review if you have decided already what it must say?

More to the point, why is the government getting involved in the first place? What chills Baum is the idea of “politician­s telling scientists about the nature of biology”. Some scientists can’t help thinking of previous instances where government­s imposed their views on the subject: the spurious “race science” of the Nazis and the antiDarwin­ian denialism of Stalin’s regime. While that might sound a slightly hyperbolic response to a transparen­tly desperate ploy to stoke culture-wars division, the principle is the same: a government deciding an approved position on science and demanding that academics toe the line.

Much as Donelan tries to position herself as a champion of the objectivit­y and freedom of science, this interventi­on supplies more evidence of the government’s distrust of academics in general and scientists in particular – it’s of a piece with Rishi Sunak’s assertion that scientists were given too much power during the pandemic. Witness the disturbing way this policy direction is framed. However contested and emotive this particular issue, it is hardly relevant to the large-scale practice of science – yet Donelan is seeking to leverage it to imply that all of science somehow stands at risk from “woke ideology”, as if the integrity of truth itself were at stake.

That is perhaps the most ominous aspect of this announceme­nt. The creation of a fictitious, ubiquitous enemy to scare the population is indeed straight out of the fascist playbook. It was thoughtful of the Conservati­ves to drive this point home with the spectacle of party member Andrew Boff, chair of the London Assembly, being escorted from the conference hall by police on Tuesday when he voiced protest at Suella Braverman’s criticism of the term “gender ideology”.

The notion that science can be “depolitici­sed” at all, let alone by an agenda-driven political party, is understood to be nonsensica­l by those who study the interactio­ns of science and society. Of course political agendas should never dictate research results. But the questions asked, priorities decided and societal implicatio­ns of advances made absolutely make science inextricab­ly tangled with the political landscape – not least in a controvers­ial area like sex and gender. That entangleme­nt can get messy, but no true democracy tries to control the narrative.

Philip Ball is a science writer and the author of the forthcomin­g book, How Life Works: A User’s Guide to the New Biology

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Amadi and Fagbenle hope the couples’ conflicts will draw just as much debate as was seen in the YouTube comments; the audience looks set to be just as global, with the show already picked up by Black Entertainm­ent Television – BET – in the US, and Prime in Africa.

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• In Love & Toxic: Blue Therapy is on YouTube and E4 from 5 October and available to stream on Channel 4

 ?? ?? Michelle Donelan delivering her speech at the Conservati­ve party conference on Tuesday. Photograph: James Veysey/Shuttersto­ck
Michelle Donelan delivering her speech at the Conservati­ve party conference on Tuesday. Photograph: James Veysey/Shuttersto­ck

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