Professor Richard Hindmarsh School of Environment and Science; and Griffith Centre for Governance and Public Policy, Griffith University, Brisbane

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Transcription:

A Crisis of Expertise? Legitimacy and the challenge of policymaking Arts, University of Melbourne 15-16 February 2018 Professor Richard Hindmarsh School of Environment and Science; and Griffith Centre for Governance and Public Policy, Griffith University, Brisbane TOPICS: 1. Focus 2. Problem 3. Nuclear inquiry findings 4. Wrap up Supported by the Australian Research Council Discovery scheme (project DP170101440)

Focus of conference The role and legitimacy of expertise in policymaking increasingly questioned Time to think about policymaking regarding experts and expertise Theme: Knowledge and society In policymaking what experts and expertise are recruited? How do they get it wrong, and what gaps are there? Theme: Policy in practice What does the crisis of expertise mean for rethinking policymaking in practice When does it fail, and why? Theme: Innovation and experimentation What innovative approaches to policymaking and expertise hold the most promise? greater public participation and democratisation of policymaking Wider meaningful representation of civic and expert knowledge All these themes work into my focus on rethinking the public inquiry on science, technology and environmental change (or impact), otherwise STE inquiry 2

Goal: explore & develop an enhanced participatory approach for the STE public inquiry Aims: Identify contemporary participatory engagement weaknesses in the STE public inquiry at national and state levels on controversial S&T Explore enhanced participatory conduits to deepen the capacity of the STE public inquiry to engage with complex issues of controversial S&T and the environment and society Analyse relevant institutional contexts of the public inquiry to facilitate that in Australia regarding the STE public inquiry 3

Since ca. 2000 the S&T policy participatory turn begins (EU, UK esp.) Also in env. sustainability approaches for more effective policy outcomes Overall: collaborative, partnership, inclusive engagement, etc. Late 2010s: new governance env. policy approaches = principles of good governance and env. sustainability ( stronger forms) Public inquiry examples though remain few, e.g. in STE: GM Nation, nanotech upstream engagement, STEP (Australia), TA (Denmark) 1974 Berger Inquiry process arguably remains the seminal public inquiry example: relatively open forums of engagement and agenda setting; open information, equitable funding, and resource support, formal and community hearings 4

The public inquiry, as an authoritative part of the policy process in liberal democracies, includes parliamentary inquiries, royal commissions, task forces, committees, and reviews. especially at national and state governance levels A primary reason of the inquiry is to resolve highly contentious issues that have attracted significant distrust in government, here, the so-called technological inquiry. However, its inadequacy to resolve numerous issues around adverse environmental and social impacts of controversial big S&T is a growing public policy problem of significant distrust in govt. capacities to formulate effective policy win-win outcomes for all, esp. communities and/or the broader civic sphere In Australia, most topically, GMOs, wind farms, nuclear, and coal seam gas (CSG) mining In this socio-environmental context, I refer to the Science, Technology and Environment (STE) public inquiry, as a subset of the public inquiry So, what are the problems of the STE public inquiry? 5

The STE public inquiry in Australia is typically decoupled from new governance contexts and principles regarding participatory decision-making pathways. Typical decoupled problems as former Green Party Senator Scott Ludlam highlighted in his submission to the SA 2015 Royal Commission on the Nuclear Fuel Cycle include narrow terms of reference, an unbalanced expert panel and consultation failures and a crisis of confidence in the process Similar issues reflected Aust. public inquires on nuclear, GMOs, wind farms, and CSG Most studies (the few in OZ, most OS) find they most often represent legitimation exercises to advance controversial technologies conclusions: Inadequately address numerous local social, environmental, and interrelated sustainability issues Bias to development, economic prosperity, technological determinism, and progress Social conflict,stakeholder confidence, & opportunities for win-win outcomes Adds to a treadmill of failed, ad hoc, and reactive policy making over the last 25 years at least 6

Australian STE inquiries and benefit/concern perspectives Aligned to the participatory turn 1. MEDIA ANALYSIS The nuclear waste debate in Australia 1999-2017 (i) nuclear development issues (ii) inquiry processes and participatory issues (4 inquiries) GMO, wind farm, and CSG inquiry processes and participatory issues 2. SUBMISSION ANALYSIS 3. INTERVIEW ANALYSIS 2015 RC submissions 2015 Senate CSG Inquiry 2013-2017 State submissions Interview 1 analysis of critical groups re participatory aspects of RC on nuclear fuel cycle

a) Broader picture of nuke power development (1999 onwards) a) media analysis of benefit and concern perceptions (no benefits done here) b) Stakeholders or interests in the nuclear debate c) % of concerns d) 2015 SA RC inquiry concerns raised e) Suggestions for better participation 8

Percentage of benefits/concerns 60% 50% Percentage of benefits and concerns cited each year 87 244 40% 65 30% Benefits 20% 107 101 Concerns 10% 17 0% 2 1 1 3 5 2 2 2 7 4 5 1 5 1 4 2 3 2 2 1 Figure: Percentage of benefits and concerns cited each year (n=187 for total number of benefits and n=489 for total number of concerns in all (276) articles). The data labels on the top of each bar show the number of benefits or concerns cited each year NB: sourced from 52 national, regional, and community newspapers and ABC & SBS news online

Percentage of benefits/concerns 45% 40% 74 35% 161 30% 25% 51 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 4 30 25 62 79 22 53 13 15 15 13 27 7 10 13 9 2 2 Benefits Concerns n=505 for total number of concerns and n=193 for total number of benefits cited by stakeholders in 276 articles 10

Percentage of concerns Percentage of concerns 35% 30% 3c. Concerns about nuclear development cited 35% 15% 6% Economic Environmental 25% 20% 15% 44% Gov. and policy 10% 5% Social 0% n=505 total number of concerns cited in all 276 articles 11

Number of concerns 3d. Inquiry concerns re the 2015 SA RC contrast to 3 other nuclear inquiries: 2000 Lucas Heights, 2005 NRWMB, and 2006 UMPNER 50 45 40 35 42 44 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 28 26 22 16 12 10 6 7 6 1 Terms of reference Committee Inquiry process Inquiry outcome Lucas Heights Inquiry NRWMB Inquiry UMPNER Inquiry SA RC (n=88 for SA Royal Commission and n=74 for Other inquiries ) 12

Interviews with 16 participants who had raised participatory issues in relation to the SA RC in their submissions out of 40 submissions identified who could be contacted and/or willing/able to participate 4/16 outside WA 250 submissions (many pro-nuclear industry interests trying to sell equipment) Interview Participants Environmental groups 5 Anti-nuclear organisations 3 University researchers 2 Local governments 2 Aboriginal interests 2 Union Delegates 2 13

Concerns about the SA RC terms of reference Terms of reference were narrow, biased to pro-position, and rushed Concerns about the SA RC committee The committee was biased Concerns about the SA RC process Concerns about the real agenda behind the SA RC Inadequate public information and consultation (very high) Information sessions dominated by technical informants Hearings witnesses selected excluded most challengers Concerns about the submission process Issues papers were biased, narrow and very technical Guiding questions to address biased, leading, and highly technical ( framing boxes ), largely inaccessible to many Concerns about the SA RC outcome Economic assumptions not trustworthy The report ignored risks associated with nuclear waste The report relied mainly on pro-nuclear perspectives 14

Theme 1(71%): enabling effective public representation in the inquiry more public awareness & education about the public inquiry and its issues more representation of civic interests and their diversity prior and ongoing dialogic exercises about the issues (and is the inquiry really necessary) public engagement in setting up the TOR and inquiry processes inquiries need to be more open and transparent about the intentions valuing civic interest knowledge in partnership with experts independent and unbiased inquiries Theme 2 (21%): alternative participatory exercises innovative dialogic engagement exercises transparent and meaningful ones Theme 3 (7%): addressing other participatory barriers political barriers the ignorant and passive culture of Australia resource inequities for better civic representation inaccessible inquiries, including language and remoteness 15

The majority of concerns about nuclear development centred around governance and policy, in particular public inquiries regarding: terms of reference inquiry committee and its expertise inquiry processes inquiry outcomes Regarding the SAR RC, main concerns as barriers to civic participation: inadequate public consultation, lack of transparency in the inquiry process narrow terms of reference In turn, many participatory suggestions reflected contemporary trends to participatory governance with some interesting suggestions Such evidences strengthens: the argument that the STE public inquiry has major participatory deficits in key areas of process and practice around expertise, knowledge, and legitimacy that a more innovative participatory public inquiry is needed to increase policy capacity to more effectively address the many complexities around controversial science, 16 technology and environmental (and social) change.