4.8 Article

Designing Participatory Technology Assessments: A Reflexive Method for Advancing the Public Role in Science Policy Decision-making

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.techfore.2021.120974

Keywords

Participatory technology assessment (pTA); Citizen deliberation; Responsible innovation; Reflexivity; Decision-making

Funding

  1. Center for Nanotechnology and Society at Arizona State University (CNS-ASU)
  2. Nanotechnology Informal Science Education Network (NISENet) at the Museum of Science (MOS)
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX14AF95A]
  4. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NA15SEC0080005]
  5. U.S. Department of Energy [DOE0638102205]
  6. Kettering Foundation
  7. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation [2017-9921]
  8. Charles Koch Foundation

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This study presents the current state of the ECAST pTA method, showcases situations that prompted new method innovations, and offers a vision for further integrating pTA into democratic science policy decision-making.
Decades of social science scholarship have documented and explored the interconnected nature of science, technology, and society. Multiple theoretical frameworks suggest the potential to direct this process of mutual shaping toward desired outcomes and away from undesired ones through broader inclusion of new voices and visions. In 2010, a group of researchers, educators, and policy practitioners established the Expert and Citizen Assessment of Science and Technology (ECAST) network to operationalize these frameworks. Over the course of a decade, ECAST developed an innovative and reflexive participatory technology assessment (pTA) method to support democratic science policy decision-making in different technical, social, and political contexts. The method's reflexive nature gave rise to continuous innovations and iterative improvements. The current ECAST pTA method includes three participatory phases: 1) Problem Framing; 2) ECAST Citizen Deliberation; and 3) Results and Integration. Proving adaptable and replicable, the method has generated outputs for decision-making on a variety of science and technology issues and at governance scales ranging from the local to the national and international. ECAST's distributed network model has also promoted independence, continuity, and sustainability through changing sociopolitical contexts. In this paper, we detail the current state of the ECAST pTA method; share mini case studies to illustrate circumstances that prompted new method innovations; and offer a vision for further developing and integrating pTA into democratic science policy decision-making.

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