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Articles

Public involvement in risk governance in the internet era: impact of new rules of building trust and credibility

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Pages 991-1007 | Received 13 Sep 2018, Accepted 11 Nov 2020, Published online: 09 Feb 2021
 

Abstract

The article draws attention to the multidirectional impact of the widespread Internet communication on public involvement in risk governance processes. The prevalence of Internet communication changes the rules of building credibility and trust, and a position of expert knowledge. As online peer-to-peer information are not verified by any single trustworthy institution, the expert community often perceives it as a source of disturbance in risk governance. We refuse to frame online communication simply in terms of a threat to responsible dealing with risks and, instead, demonstrate how it creates new conditions for public involvement in risk governance, which may strengthen or hamper responsible risk governance, potentially compensating for the shortcomings of the system based solely on state agencies’ activities. Basing on the qualitative analysis of three critical cases, we show how the involvement of Internet-enabled groups impacts the risk governance of specific issues in Poland. Specifically, the Internet-enabled participation amplifies evidence-based concerns (the case of city air pollution), signals new “unknown unknowns” (the case of fracking), or weakens procedures based on the body of scientific knowledge (the case of vaccination controversy). To decide when and how to harness the potential of internet-enabled public involvement and when to focus on limiting the harms it may engender, we propose a framework that takes into account the level of uncertainty, the extent to which risk mitigation policy in place reflects the scientific consensus (if there is one), and the accepted rules of credibility and trust by Internet-enabled groups to expert knowledge. We claim that risk governance processes should routinely involve analyses and actions aimed at governing risks that ignore the impact of widespread Internet use may prove counter-effective.

Acknowledgments

Agata Stasik thanks the organizers of the Lorentz Center Workshop on ‘Multilateral Governance of Technological Risk’, Professor Marjolein van Asselt, Dr. Behnam Taebi and Professor Ibo van de Poel for invitation to the workshop, and its participants for stimulating discussions. Dariusz Jemielniak’s contribution was supported by a grant no. 2019/35/B/HS6/01056 from Polish National Science Centre. The authors also thanks the anonymous reviewer for his/her useful comments.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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