| Literature DB >> 33071607 |
Abstract
In the Netherlands, as in many other nations, the government has proposed the use of a contact-tracing app as a means of helping to contain the spread of the corona virus. The discussion about the use of such an app has mostly been framed in terms of a tradeoff between privacy and public health. This research statement presents an analysis of the Dutch public debate on Corona-apps by using the framework of Orders of Worth by Boltanski and Thévenot (1991). It argues that this framework can help us to move beyond the dichotomy of privacy vs. public health by recognizing a plurality of conceptions of the common good in the debate about contact-tracing apps. This statement presents six orders of worth present in the Dutch debate: civic, domestic, vitality, market, industrial and project, and argues that the identification of which common goods are at stake will contribute to discussions about the use of this technology from a standpoint with a richer ethical perspective.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Common good; Corona-app; Digital health; Justification framework; Moral repertoires; Public values
Year: 2020 PMID: 33071607 PMCID: PMC7546923 DOI: 10.1007/s10676-020-09555-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ethics Inf Technol ISSN: 1388-1957
Orders of worth present in the corona-app debate in the Netherlands
| Order | Common good | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Civic | Collective well-being | ‘This can only be done when we handle privacy carefully. It can only be done with trust from society’a |
| Domestic | Tradition and hierarchy | ‘That is how we do things here’ |
| Vitality | Greater health | ‘Better detection of infections can help prevent a new revival of the outbreak’ |
| Market | Economic growth | ‘[we need to] get to a situation in which we try to make the economy function as well as possible’ |
| Industrial | Increased efficiency an expertise | ‘Apps may be able to largely automate the source and contact research(..), you can trace contacts where we may not be aware of or have forgotten, thereby speeding up the process |
| Project | Innovation | ‘It's 2020! We are in the twenty-first century and I think (…) that some of the ways we work now are still very deep, deep from the last century.’b |
aOriginal dutch: ‘dat kan alleen als we heel zorgvuldig omgaan met privacy. Het kan alleen met vertrouwen van de samenleving’
bM. Heidenrijk at Pakhuis de Zwijger on 08/05/2020: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFo_oS3wlR4&t=2240s (accessed 04–06-2020). Original Dutch: ‘ja het is gewoon 2020! We zitten gewoon in de 21ste eeuw en ik vind, dat dat wel een stukje kritiek, dat sommige manieren hoe wij nu werken nog heel erg diep, diep vanuit de vorige eeuw zijn.’