The Social and Cultural Construction of Risk 1987
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-3395-8_15
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Cultural Aspects of Risk Assessment in Britain and the United States

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
12
0

Year Published

1988
1988
2014
2014

Publication Types

Select...
6
4

Relationship

1
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 30 publications
(14 citation statements)
references
References 10 publications
2
12
0
Order By: Relevance
“…( 92 ) An important subset of the psychological literature is risk communication, which is summarized by Leiss. ( 93 ) International and comparative studies are performed, ( 94 ) as well as studies of group dynamics such as the risky shift, which recognize that group decision making has as much peculiarity as that of individuals. ( 95 ) Psychological interest in risk is often complemented with studies from other disciplines in an attempt to rein in risk to a comprehensive assessment and management science.…”
Section: Underlying Epistemological Approach and Review Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…( 92 ) An important subset of the psychological literature is risk communication, which is summarized by Leiss. ( 93 ) International and comparative studies are performed, ( 94 ) as well as studies of group dynamics such as the risky shift, which recognize that group decision making has as much peculiarity as that of individuals. ( 95 ) Psychological interest in risk is often complemented with studies from other disciplines in an attempt to rein in risk to a comprehensive assessment and management science.…”
Section: Underlying Epistemological Approach and Review Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…STS scholars and other regulatory analysts have often responded to this kind of analysis, as is our intention in this paper, by 'deconstructing' regulatory science -by identifying indeterminate or empirically under-determined aspects of knowledge claims, making explicit the key choices, assumptions and inferences that have been invoked, and then seeking to explain the selection of those subjective commitments by reference to wider contextual values, interests and cultural norms. (Gillespie et al, 1979;Jasanoff, 1987;Latin, 1988;Wynne, 1992) One strand of this literature has focused on how the social interests of corporate actors contribute to shaping regulatory knowledge, particularly via industrial involvement in the conduct of scientific studies, and in the evaluation of experimental data. (Abraham, 1993;Huff, 2002;Michaels, 2008) In many policy arenas, regulated industries, or commissioned third parties, design and perform experimental studies, interpret and ascribe meaning to study findings, review broader scientific literatures, challenge regulatory institutions' interpretations of data, and even draft the overall assessments that form the basis of regulatory agencies' decisions.…”
Section: Conceptual and Methodological Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wynne and Mayer (1993) have argued that this is the case for British governmental experts, who deny uncertainty so as to avoid accountability; a 'greener' environmental science, according to these authors, would explicitly acknowledge the unknown. By contrast, in us regulatory science, uncertainty is both more readily accepted and more rapidly translated into the technical discourse of risk assessment (Jasanoff 1987). We will return to this point below.…”
Section: Socio-technical Hybridsmentioning
confidence: 97%