Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy

This paper analyses the technical, commercial, institutional and socio-political (TCIS) issues of a controversial proposal to develop an international high level nuclear waste (HLW) repository in South Australia in order to answer the question; could South Australia legitimise an international geolo...

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Main Author: Pickett, William
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39099/
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author Pickett, William
author_facet Pickett, William
author_sort Pickett, William
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper analyses the technical, commercial, institutional and socio-political (TCIS) issues of a controversial proposal to develop an international high level nuclear waste (HLW) repository in South Australia in order to answer the question; could South Australia legitimise an international geological nuclear waste repository? The framework for the analysis uniquely draws parallels between the social amplification of risk framework, stakeholder theory and the innovation literature. The analysis of secondary and primary interview transcripts – supplemented by other publically available data – illustrates how stakeholders have used influence tactics to shape their salience based on the TCIS uncertainties identified, and their ability to amplify or attenuate risks. The findings suggest that the technology does not yet have socio-political legitimacy, based on secondary stakeholder groups’ opposition and influence tactics. This affected the outcome of political decision making. Cognitive legitimacy was yet to be established because South Australia does not yet have the knowledge and expertise – nor a suitable regulator – to successfully develop a repository, and the economic assumptions have not yet gone through a rigorous conjecture-refutation approach. The paper then concludes with recommendations that could create the conditions for legitimisation in the future.
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spelling nottingham-390992022-01-21T13:41:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39099/ Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy Pickett, William This paper analyses the technical, commercial, institutional and socio-political (TCIS) issues of a controversial proposal to develop an international high level nuclear waste (HLW) repository in South Australia in order to answer the question; could South Australia legitimise an international geological nuclear waste repository? The framework for the analysis uniquely draws parallels between the social amplification of risk framework, stakeholder theory and the innovation literature. The analysis of secondary and primary interview transcripts – supplemented by other publically available data – illustrates how stakeholders have used influence tactics to shape their salience based on the TCIS uncertainties identified, and their ability to amplify or attenuate risks. The findings suggest that the technology does not yet have socio-political legitimacy, based on secondary stakeholder groups’ opposition and influence tactics. This affected the outcome of political decision making. Cognitive legitimacy was yet to be established because South Australia does not yet have the knowledge and expertise – nor a suitable regulator – to successfully develop a repository, and the economic assumptions have not yet gone through a rigorous conjecture-refutation approach. The paper then concludes with recommendations that could create the conditions for legitimisation in the future. 2016-12-01 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39099/1/William%20Pickett%20-%20Dissertation%20FINAL.pdf Pickett, William (2016) Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] Nuclear waste management sustainability risk perceptions innovation stakeholder
spellingShingle Nuclear waste management
sustainability
risk perceptions
innovation
stakeholder
Pickett, William
Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
title Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
title_full Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
title_fullStr Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
title_full_unstemmed Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
title_short Unprecedented geological and political stability? An analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in South Australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
title_sort unprecedented geological and political stability? an analysis of a prospective geological high-level nuclear waste repository in south australia based on stakeholder theory, risk perception and deliberative democracy
topic Nuclear waste management
sustainability
risk perceptions
innovation
stakeholder
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39099/