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Journal Article

Citation

Kasperson RE. Environ. Health Perspect. 1983; 52: 15-20.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1983, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

6418541

PMCID

PMC1569363

Abstract

This paper has three objectives: to explore the nature of the problem implicit in the term "risk acceptability," to examine the possible contributions of scientific information to risk standard-setting, and to argue that societal response is best guided by considerations of process rather than formal methods of analysis. Most technological risks are not accepted but are imposed. There is also little reason to expect consensus among individuals on their tolerance of risk. Moreover, debates about risk levels are often at base debates over the adequacy of the institutions which manage the risks. Scientific information can contribute three broad types of analyses to risk-setting deliberations: contextual analysis, equity assessment, and public preference analysis. More effective risk-setting decisions will involve attention to the process used, particularly in regard to the requirements of procedural justice and democratic responsibility.


Language: en

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