Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment

The UK Civil Service Reform Plan includes a commitment to embedding systems that are open to a broad range of inputs, including those of the public. Public responsiveness is therefore recognized as a key characteristic of good governance including in the field of science and technology policy-making...

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Main Author: Mohr, Alison
Format: Article
Published: University of Nottingham 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/3016/
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author Mohr, Alison
author_facet Mohr, Alison
author_sort Mohr, Alison
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The UK Civil Service Reform Plan includes a commitment to embedding systems that are open to a broad range of inputs, including those of the public. Public responsiveness is therefore recognized as a key characteristic of good governance including in the field of science and technology policy-making. Since the influential 2000 ‘Science and Society’ report from the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology, research councils and Government departments have sponsored dialogues around several prospective technologies and associated policy options including the commercialisation of genetically modified crops, stem-cell research, nanotechnology and synthetic biology. In light of the commitment to open policy-making, what, then, are the prospects for public dialogue in making research policy more responsive?
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spelling nottingham-30162020-05-04T16:43:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/3016/ Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment Mohr, Alison The UK Civil Service Reform Plan includes a commitment to embedding systems that are open to a broad range of inputs, including those of the public. Public responsiveness is therefore recognized as a key characteristic of good governance including in the field of science and technology policy-making. Since the influential 2000 ‘Science and Society’ report from the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology, research councils and Government departments have sponsored dialogues around several prospective technologies and associated policy options including the commercialisation of genetically modified crops, stem-cell research, nanotechnology and synthetic biology. In light of the commitment to open policy-making, what, then, are the prospects for public dialogue in making research policy more responsive? University of Nottingham 2014-03-31 Article NonPeerReviewed Mohr, Alison (2014) Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment. Making Science Public (UoN blog) . (Unpublished) public engagement public dialogue responsible innovation responsive innovation energy climate change experimentation http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/03/31/making-energy-research-more-responsive-public-dialogue-as-experiment/
spellingShingle public engagement
public dialogue
responsible innovation
responsive innovation
energy
climate change
experimentation
Mohr, Alison
Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
title Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
title_full Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
title_fullStr Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
title_full_unstemmed Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
title_short Making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
title_sort making energy research more responsive: public dialogue as experiment
topic public engagement
public dialogue
responsible innovation
responsive innovation
energy
climate change
experimentation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/3016/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/3016/