Abstract
In this paper, we trace how mathematical models are made ‘evidence enough’ and ‘useful for policy’. Working with the interview accounts of mathematical modellers and other scientists engaged in the UK Covid-19 response, we focus on two weeks in March 2020 prior to the announcement of an unprecedented national lockdown. A key thread in our analysis is how pandemics are made 'big'. We follow the work of one particular device, that of modelled ‘doubling-time’. By following how modelled doubling-time entangles in its assemblage of evidence-making, we draw attention to multiple actors, including beyond models and metrics, which affect how evidence is performed in relation to the scale of epidemic and its policy response. We draw attention to: policy; Government scientific advice infrastructure; time; uncertainty; and leaps of faith. The ‘bigness’ of the pandemic, and its evidencing, is situated in social and affective practices, in which uncertainty and dis-ease are inseparable from calculus. This materialises modelling in policy as an ‘uncomfortable science’. We argue that situational fit in-the-moment is at least as important as empirical fit when attending to what models perform in policy.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 114907 |
Journal | Social Science and Medicine |
Volume | 301 |
Early online date | 12 Mar 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 May 2022 |
Acknowledgements
We thank our participants who generously gave their time to work in dialogue with us.Funding
This project is part supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant (DP210101604) and part supported through London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. We are grateful for support from the UNSW SHARP (Professor Tim Rhodes) and Scientia (Associate Professor Kari Lancaster) schemes.
Keywords
- Affect
- Assemblage
- Covid-19
- Evidence-making
- Mathematical models
- Pandemic
- Problematization
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Health(social science)
- History and Philosophy of Science