4.5 Article

Knowledge, Information, and Data Readiness Levels (KaRLs) for Risk Assessment, Communication, and Governance of Nano-, New, and Other Advanced Materials

Journal

GLOBAL CHALLENGES
Volume 7, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/gch2.202200211

Keywords

cocreation; codesign; knowledge readiness; novel technologies; risk governance; stakeholder engagement

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This study develops a new approach called KaRLs, a nine-level, stepwise categorization and guidance system, to integrate scientific outcomes and stakeholders needs for improving risk assessment, communication, and governance of new materials. The novelty of the new system lies in its user/stakeholder-friendly, transparent, flexible, and holistic approach to communicate and share all available and relevant elements on material related risks, promoting reflection, awareness, communication, and a deeper understanding for sustainable risk governance.
The obvious benefits derived from the increasing use of engineered nano-, new, and advanced materials and associated products have to be weighed out by a governance process against their possible risks. Differences in risk perception (beliefs about potential harm) among stakeholders, in particular nonscientists, and low transparency of the underlying decision processes can lead to a lack of support and acceptance of nano-, new, and other advanced material enabled products. To integrate scientific outcomes with stakeholders needs, this work develops a new approach comprising a nine-level, stepwise categorization and guidance system entitled Knowledge, Information, and Data Readiness Levels (KaRLs), analogous to the NASA Technology Readiness Levels. The KaRL system assesses the type, extent, and usability of the available data, information, and knowledge and integrates the participation of relevant and interested stakeholders in a cocreation/codesign process to improve current risk assessment, communication, and governance. The novelty of the new system is to communicate and share all available and relevant elements on material related risks in a user/stakeholder-friendly, transparent, flexible, and holistic way and so stimulate reflection, awareness, communication, and a deeper understanding that ultimately enables the discursive process that is needed for the sustainable risk governance of new materials.

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