25
‘Trust’ and New Participatory Forms of Governance for (Bio)Technological Change Richard Hindmarsh Tee Rogers-Hayden Griffith University, Australia Univ. of East Anglia, UK

‘Trust’ and New Participatory Forms of Governance for (Bio)Technological Change

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

‘Trust’ and New Participatory Forms of Governance for (Bio)Technological Change. Richard Hindmarsh Tee Rogers-Hayden Griffith University, Australia Univ. of East Anglia, UK. TOPICS. Crisis in public trust re S&T 2. Australia’s GM regulatory legitimisers - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

‘Trust’ and New Participatory Forms of Governance for

(Bio)Technological Change

Richard Hindmarsh Tee Rogers-Hayden Griffith University, Australia Univ. of East Anglia, UK

TOPICS

1. Crisis in public trust re S&T 2. Australia’s GM regulatory

legitimisers

3. NZ & the RCGM as a regulatory legitimiser

4. Ideas for new forms of governance

TOPIC 1: Crisis in public trust re S&T • A deep crisis in public trust of science now

apparent• 1980s – positioned as lack of public

understanding of science• more recently, its the catalyst for institutional

redesign towards participatory governance • to strengthen reflexivity and legitimacy of

governing• The drivers:

– The Public: increasing questioning of govt’s ability to handle risk, now GM building on food safety scares of the 1980s, & the BSE crisis

– Science & Biotech industries: concerned about opposition to GM– The State: concerned about the challenge to innovation & govt.– The Critics: opportunity to reduce authority of science & open up

new possibilities for public engagement, improved governance, and trust

1 Catalyst for distrust: actions

• 1997 Monsanto's unsegregated soya• contamination of non-GM: Spain, Mexico &

Canada, etc• patenting and ownership of ‘nature’• non-labelling of GM foods • GM regulation’s reliance on pro-GM expert

committee’s• overall: intermeshed state, business &

scientific interests

2 Catalyst for distrust: re institutional response

• Institutional response to distrust seen as biased, inadequate & out of touch:– portrayal of regulation as thorough despite narrowness– continued reliance on the rhetoric of ‘sound science’

and ‘increase science literacy’– increasing public acceptance routines, eg, exhibitions,

forums, websites, surveys, inquiries

• overall, existing institutions are seen as unable to address effectively the new policy challenges raised: – bioethics, value conflicts, responsibility to future

generations and non-human nature, monopoly power, need for precaution as GM can only be partially controlled, high consequence risks, democratic governance, etc.

3. Catalyst for distrust: manoeuvres exposed

• continued exposure of manipulative manoeuvres• increasing resort to PR, propaganda, rhetoric in

pro-GM discourses to booster claims– which themselves are increasingly criticised, eg ‘RR’

crops

• tactics of marginalisation and delegitimisation of critics and public – critics = anti-science, neo-luddites, extremists – public = ignorant and alarmist– even as uncertainty and risk of science increasingly

apparent

• science articles rely on increasing favourable public understanding:– ‘In Science we Trust’– ‘How to Restore Public Trust in Science’– seen as inadequate in not addressing the depth of the

debate and out of touch with the public

What’s a regulatory legitimiser?

• a significant device, mechanism, strategy or intervention of governance

• to control regulation & absorb dissent, & thus control ‘problem populations’

• to legitimise & enable GM experimentation; then commercialisation

• What’s governance? = a regime of governability: state ministeries, agencies and interests; R&D networks; agencies of civil societyBiotech: 1. Scientists (1970s), 2. State agencies (late

70s), 3. Industrial interests (1980s)

Topic 2: Australia’s 4 key GMregulatory legitimisers

1. 1975 peer-review in-house regulation

2. 1979 Australian Academy of Science report

3. 1990 GM Inquiry

4. Gene Technology Act 2000

1. peer-review in-house regulation

• Controversy arises post 1973 • Asilomar (1975) – [National Institutes of Health]

– broader hazards marginalised – benefits > risks– ‘responsible scientific review’– compulsory regulation & moratorium unnecessary– voluntarily self‑regulation the way

• NIH developed minimalist or low risk international guidelines

• ASCORD: supervision by supportive scientists– no role for public– No opportunities for scientific and public dissent

within regulation

m in im a lis t re gu la tion

A s ilo m arC o nfe ren ce

F o rm u la tiono f rD N A

g u id e lin es

In -ho u sese lf-re gu la to ry

co m m itte es

N IH

publicdissenting

scientists

social, ethical, broader

ecological risks &

biohazards

Shaping regulation: Asilomar to ASCORD

2. Australian Academy of Science Report

• public concerns persist but ‘contained’ overseas

– scientists: ‘epidemic pathogen hypothesis’ – bureaucrats in Australia

• University of Melbourne Assembly inquiry (1977)

– halt research! [background: GM issue redefined from safety to economic opportunity & int’ competitiveness]

• Australian Academy of Science report– rDNA low risk– Commercial opportunity

3. GM Inquiry

• regulatory committee moved into pro-GM Science department (1980)

• intense battle inside bureaucracy • 1988 ‘mutant meat’ scandal forced Inquiry • terms of reference biased• conducted by parliamentary Standing

Committee for Industry, Science & Technology

• 1992 inquiry report favourable to bio-business; public input token

• real outcome: establish mandatory uniform legislation to facilitate bio-business

4. Gene Technology Act 2000• Gene Technology Bill introduced to Oz parliament• Senate inquiry re. the Bill makes 3 key

recommendations 1. community & ethics input in proposed OGTR (deemed

detrimental to science-based decision-making)2. GTR should be statutory authority of 3 people,

independent of bioindustry (economically unviable) (1 pro-industry)

3. provision for review of regulator (no provision)

• Lawson’s risk assessment of the 1st release• broader environment ignored (only gene flow &

weediness) • no mention of PP (section 4aa of the Act) or ESD

Bayer Cropscience and Monsanto GM canola approved 2003/4

critics call for major review, trust a major issue

“The canola applications have focussed attention on the Act. If the nationally consistent scheme enabling the use of gene technology is to regain some credibility a review of the Act should be commenced before the statutory date of June 2005.”

TOPIC 3:NZ & the RCGM as a

regulatory legitimiser

NZ: Background• Latecomer to the GM debate, ERMA 1988• no releases yet, GM in processed foods• set to change with moratorium lifted 29 Oct. 2003 • much resistance before and since• like anti-nuke campaign, GE-free zones (districts,

people’s homes, properties), & resistance groups• ‘hot’ issue in 1999 national elections • Green Party pressured for Royal Commission• Signified loss of trust by environmentalists• New Labour/Alliance government instigated one on

8 May 2000

Diverging viewpoints…

GM proponents• GE the solution• needed to ‘develop’ a

sustainable response• more progress• all innovation positive

• decision-making is a science domain

• GE over-regulated

Environmentalists• more industrialisation

for industrial problems• unsustainable

approach

• sustainable GE-free organic nation

• PP needed

The Royal Commission on Genetic Modification

• 11,000 submissions: c10,000 against or tending to be against GM

• RCGM reported on the 29 July 2001

• ‘proceed with GM but with caution’

• the report read as one more of sustaining progress than of progressing sustainability

NZ’s RCGM as a ‘regulatory legitimiser’…

Marginalised dissent:• quasi-legal process advantaged well

resourced GM interests (e.g. Life Sciences Network: Avcare key industry group)

• submission template– stand alone questions advantaged a modernist

parts approach– answers collated into a summary report– environmental & Maori voices disadvantaged

• subjective public survey by Commissioners advantaged GM supporters

• Outcome: protest & distrust heightened

Conclusions...

• case studies illustrate highly political discourses legitimating modernist governance rather than building trust

• deep distrust has resulted regarding the new challenges of GM

• institutional re-design needed to regain trust

• what might they be?

TOPIC 4:1. Ideas for new forms of governanceMillstone & van Zwanenberg (2000)

• acknowledge uncertainties & limitations of science • acknowledge risks & benefits for different publics• inclusive decision-making• establish scientific & democratic legitimacy

Conditions: – open information (limit commercial

confidentiality)– separate regulatory and development agencies– separate scientific and political risk

management – pluralistic scientific views & conditional advice

in regulation

2. Ideas for new forms of governance

PLUS• pluralistic knowledge approaches• civic participatory governance approaches

that engender communication and trust• new political mechanisms/spaces

integrating citizen and expert participation & dialogue

• broad social, cultural, ethical & economic technological assessment pre-technology adoption, & for regulation once adopted

• post technological monitoring & adjustment to knowledge possessed at any one time