Tradeoffs in deliberative public engagement with science
Date
2018
Authors
Calyx, Cobi
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Abstract
During the last 30 years deliberative democracy and public
engagement with science have developed in theory and practice to
the extent that areas of consensus have emerged about good
deliberative public engagement in theory. This thesis argues that
in practice some areas of consensus require tradeoffs. Tradeoffs
help practitioners to make decisions in design that they will
otherwise have to navigate in process.
Other researchers have discussed five tensions in STS public
engagement; this thesis adapts three as tradeoffs. The tradeoffs
are representative or inclusive participation; public or
organisational ownership; and upstream or actionable outcomes.
These tradeoffs are analysed through three case studies of
deliberative public engagement with science in Australia.
The three case studies used two different methods of deliberative
public engagement with science, namely deliberative voting and
citizen’s jury methods. All of the case studies were examples
of invited participation, reflecting organisational ownership.
Public ownership is incompatible with invited participation,
given the role of an organising sponsor or group of people who
have power in designing deliberations. Criteria for good
deliberative public engagement with science can make power
imbalances transparent, but organisational norms remain evident
in outcomes.
Access to information varies in deliberative public engagement
with science. Organisational norms are revealed through what
information is chosen as relevant in design phases. What
information becomes part of a deliberative process depends on
which scientists present and with which expert witnesses are
available for participants to engage. In addition, communicative
actions of participants during processes can change what
information participants use to develop mutual understandings.
For example, in the second case study, live results of
attitudinal voting were shared on a screen during deliberations.
This may have influenced how participants engaged with each
other. Deliberations in the third case study were organised
around the report of an earlier commission, however personal
narratives shared by deliberators became extra sources of
information. Though much information is predesigned,
communicative actions during deliberations can have impacts.
Considering what information participants bring to deliberations
through their perspectives during recruitment is discursive
representation. In this thesis, all three case studies were
analysed for demographic representativeness. Some scholars have
argued discursive representativeness is more valuable for
deliberative public engagement with science. A diversity of
perspectives and knowledge increases the pool of arguments with
which participants can engage to develop mutual understandings.
However demographic representativeness is associated with
legitimacy and is easier to evaluate than discursive
representativeness.
An alternative to considering representativeness in recruitment
is inclusion. Full inclusion is rarely possible, given the scale
of issues, so inclusion of specific groups is more typical.
Engaging with specific groups can also address systemic power
imbalances and ensure voices that may otherwise be left out of
the public sphere are included. There is no claim to
representativeness in deliberations among specific groups. Thus
deliberative public engagement with science among specific groups
is more valuable if iterated across multiple sites of place and
time. These iterations can be linked together in a decentred
deliberative democracy strategy.
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Keywords
Deliberative democracy, science communication, public engagement, deliberative engagement, deliberative process, science and technology studies, STS, tradeoffs, decision making, policy making, public ownership, organisation, organization, ownership, upstream, actionable, outcomes, case studies, deliberative voting, citizen's juries, citizen's jury, deliberative poll, invited participation, uninvited participation, power, transparency, accountability, organizational norms, organisational norms, communicative actions, discursive representation, demographic representation, representativeness, inclusion, public sphere, decentred democracy, decentered democracy, democracy, science, biotechnology, genetic modification, synthetic biology, nuclear, nuclear energy, nuclear waste storage
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