Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges

abstract: Participatory approaches to policy-making and research are thought to “open up” technical decision-making to broader considerations, empower diverse public audiences, and inform policies that address pluralistic public goods. Many studies of participatory efforts focus on specific features...

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Other Authors: Weller, Nicholas A (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54998
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-549982019-11-07T03:01:11Z Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges abstract: Participatory approaches to policy-making and research are thought to “open up” technical decision-making to broader considerations, empower diverse public audiences, and inform policies that address pluralistic public goods. Many studies of participatory efforts focus on specific features or outcomes of those efforts, such as the format of a participatory event or the opinions of participants. While valuable, such research has not resolved conceptual problems and critiques of participatory efforts regarding, for example, their reinforcement of expert perspectives or their inability to impact policy- and decision-making. I studied two participatory efforts using survey data collected from participants, interviews with policy makers and experts associated with each project, and an analysis of project notes, meeting minutes, and my own personal reflections about each project. Both projects were based one type of participatory effort called Participatory Technology Assessment (pTA). I examined how project goals, materials, and the values, past experiences, and judgments of practitioners influenced decisions that shaped two participatory efforts to better understand how practitioners approached the challenges associated with participatory efforts. I found four major themes that influenced decisions about these projects: Promoting learning; building capacity to host pTA events; fostering good deliberation; and policy relevance. Project organizers engaged in iterative discussions to negotiate how learning goals related to dominant ideas from policy and expert communities and frequently reflected on the impact of participatory efforts on participants and on broader socio-political systems. Practitioners chose to emphasize criteria for deliberation that were flexible and encompassing. They relied heavily on internal discussions about materials and format, and on feedback collected from participants, policy makers, and other stakeholders, to shape both projects, though some decisions resulted in unexpected and undesirable outcomes for participant discussions and policy relevance. Past experience played a heavy role in many decisions about participatory format and concerns about deliberative or participatory theory were only nominally present. My emphasis on understanding the practice of participatory efforts offers a way to reframe research on participatory efforts away from studying ‘moments’ of participation to studying the larger role participatory efforts play in socio-political systems. Dissertation/Thesis Weller, Nicholas A (Author) Childers, Daniel L (Advisor) Bennett, Ira (Committee member) Coseo, Paul (Committee member) Klinsky, Sonja (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Sustainability Participatory Technology Assessment eng 318 pages Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54998 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sustainability
Participatory Technology Assessment
spellingShingle Sustainability
Participatory Technology Assessment
Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges
description abstract: Participatory approaches to policy-making and research are thought to “open up” technical decision-making to broader considerations, empower diverse public audiences, and inform policies that address pluralistic public goods. Many studies of participatory efforts focus on specific features or outcomes of those efforts, such as the format of a participatory event or the opinions of participants. While valuable, such research has not resolved conceptual problems and critiques of participatory efforts regarding, for example, their reinforcement of expert perspectives or their inability to impact policy- and decision-making. I studied two participatory efforts using survey data collected from participants, interviews with policy makers and experts associated with each project, and an analysis of project notes, meeting minutes, and my own personal reflections about each project. Both projects were based one type of participatory effort called Participatory Technology Assessment (pTA). I examined how project goals, materials, and the values, past experiences, and judgments of practitioners influenced decisions that shaped two participatory efforts to better understand how practitioners approached the challenges associated with participatory efforts. I found four major themes that influenced decisions about these projects: Promoting learning; building capacity to host pTA events; fostering good deliberation; and policy relevance. Project organizers engaged in iterative discussions to negotiate how learning goals related to dominant ideas from policy and expert communities and frequently reflected on the impact of participatory efforts on participants and on broader socio-political systems. Practitioners chose to emphasize criteria for deliberation that were flexible and encompassing. They relied heavily on internal discussions about materials and format, and on feedback collected from participants, policy makers, and other stakeholders, to shape both projects, though some decisions resulted in unexpected and undesirable outcomes for participant discussions and policy relevance. Past experience played a heavy role in many decisions about participatory format and concerns about deliberative or participatory theory were only nominally present. My emphasis on understanding the practice of participatory efforts offers a way to reframe research on participatory efforts away from studying ‘moments’ of participation to studying the larger role participatory efforts play in socio-political systems. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2019
author2 Weller, Nicholas A (Author)
author_facet Weller, Nicholas A (Author)
title Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges
title_short Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges
title_full Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges
title_fullStr Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges
title_full_unstemmed Practicing Democracy: Improving Participatory Technology Assessment for Sustainability Challenges
title_sort practicing democracy: improving participatory technology assessment for sustainability challenges
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54998
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