Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management, TU Delft, Building 31 - B 4.310 - Jaffalaan 5, 2628 BX, Delft, The Netherlands.
NASA Headquarters, 300 E Street SW, Washington, DC, 20024, USA.
Sci Eng Ethics. 2020 Jun;26(3):1709-1741. doi: 10.1007/s11948-020-00211-7. Epub 2020 Apr 1.
When one wants to use citizen input to inform policy, what should the standards of informedness on the part of the citizens be? While there are moral reasons to allow every citizen to participate and have a voice on every issue, regardless of education and involvement, designers of participatory assessments have to make decisions about how to structure deliberations as well as how much background information and deliberation time to provide to participants. After assessing different frameworks for the relationship between science and society, we use Philip Kitcher's framework of Well-Ordered Science to propose an epistemic standard on how citizen deliberations should be structured. We explore what potential standards follow from this epistemic framework focusing on significance versus scientific and engineering expertise. We argue that citizens should be tutored on the historical context of why scientific questions became significant and deemed scientifically and socially valuable, and if citizens report that they are capable of weighing in on an issue then they should be able to do so. We explore what this standard can mean by looking at actual citizen deliberations tied to the 2014 NASA ECAST Asteroid Initiative Citizen forums. We code different vignettes of citizens debating alternative approaches for Mars exploration based upon what level of information seemed to be sufficient for them to feel comfortable in making a policy position. The analysis provides recommendations on how to design and assess future citizen assessments grounded in properly conveying the historical value context surrounding a scientific issue and trusting citizens to seek out sufficient information to deliberate.
当人们希望利用公民的意见来制定政策时,公民的知情标准应该是什么?虽然从道德上讲,应该允许每个公民参与到每一个问题中,无论他们是否受过教育、是否有参与经验,但参与式评估的设计者必须要在如何组织审议以及为参与者提供多少背景信息和审议时间方面做出决策。在评估了科学与社会之间关系的不同框架之后,我们使用菲利普·基彻(Philip Kitcher)的有序科学框架,提出了关于公民审议应该如何组织的认识标准。我们探讨了从这个认识框架中可以得出哪些潜在的标准,重点关注意义与科学和工程专业知识的关系。我们认为,应该向公民传授科学问题为何变得重要以及为何被认为具有科学和社会价值的历史背景,如果公民表示他们有能力对某个问题进行权衡,那么他们就应该能够这样做。我们通过研究与 2014 年美国宇航局 ECAST 小行星倡议公民论坛相关的实际公民审议,来探讨这个标准意味着什么。我们根据不同的公民在讨论火星探索的替代方法时所需要的信息水平,对不同的案例进行了编码,使他们感到能够做出政策立场。分析提供了如何设计和评估未来的公民评估的建议,这些建议基于正确传达科学问题周围的历史价值背景,并相信公民能够寻求足够的信息进行审议。