Literature DB >> 24941612

Understanding 'anticipatory governance'.

David H Guston.   

Abstract

Anticipatory governance is 'a broad-based capacity extended through society that can act on a variety of inputs to manage emerging knowledge-based technologies while such management is still possible'. It motivates activities designed to build capacities in foresight, engagement, and integration--as well as through their production ensemble. These capacities encourage and support the reflection of scientists, engineers, policy makers, and other publics on their roles in new technologies. This article reviews the early history of the National Nanotechnology Initiative in the United States, and it further explicates anticipatory governance through exploring the genealogy of the term and addressing a set of critiques found in the literature. These critiques involve skepticism of three proximities of anticipatory governance: to its object, nanotechnology, which is a relatively indistinct one; to the public, which remains almost utterly naive toward nanotechnology; and to technoscience itself, which allegedly renders anticipatory governance complicit in its hubris. The article concludes that the changing venues and the amplification within them of the still, small voices of folks previously excluded from offering constructive visions of futures afforded by anticipatory governance may not be complete solutions to our woes in governing technology, but they certainly can contribute to bending the long arc of technoscience more toward humane ends.

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24941612     DOI: 10.1177/0306312713508669

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Stud Sci        ISSN: 0306-3127            Impact factor:   3.885


  33 in total

1.  Why we need risk innovation.

Authors:  Andrew D Maynard
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2015-09       Impact factor: 39.213

2.  Emerging technologies and the role of NGOs.

Authors:  Evan S Michelson
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2017-05-05       Impact factor: 39.213

3.  Citizen expectations of 'academic entrepreneurship' in health research: public science, practical benefit.

Authors:  Fiona A Miller; Michael Painter-Main; Renata Axler; Pascale Lehoux; Mita Giacomini; Barbara Slater
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2014-05-14       Impact factor: 3.377

4.  Reengineering Biomedical Translational Research with Engineering Ethics.

Authors:  Mary E Sunderland; Rahul Uday Nayak
Journal:  Sci Eng Ethics       Date:  2014-06-14       Impact factor: 3.525

5.  A Mobilising Concept? Unpacking Academic Representations of Responsible Research and Innovation.

Authors:  Barbara E Ribeiro; Robert D J Smith; Kate Millar
Journal:  Sci Eng Ethics       Date:  2016-03-08       Impact factor: 3.525

6.  Neuroethics and the NIH BRAIN Initiative.

Authors:  Khara M Ramos; Karen S Rommelfanger; Henry T Greely; Walter J Koroshetz
Journal:  J Responsible Innov       Date:  2017-05-05

7.  Toward Anticipatory Governance of Human Genome Editing: A Critical Review of Scholarly Governance Discourse.

Authors:  John P Nelson; Cynthia L Selin; Christopher T Scott
Journal:  J Responsible Innov       Date:  2021-07-29

8.  Mapping the landscape of climate engineering.

Authors:  P Oldham; B Szerszynski; J Stilgoe; C Brown; B Eacott; A Yuille
Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2014-12-28       Impact factor: 4.226

9.  Turning the tide or surfing the wave? Responsible Research and Innovation, fundamental rights and neoliberal virtues.

Authors:  Simone Arnaldi; Guido Gorgoni
Journal:  Life Sci Soc Policy       Date:  2016-05-27

10.  Anticipating the ethical, legal, and social implications of human genome research: An ongoing experiment.

Authors:  Eric T Juengst
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2021-06-22       Impact factor: 2.802

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