Evaluating the First U.S. Consensus Conference: The Impact of the Citizens’ Panel on Telecommunications and the Future of Democracy
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Science, Technology, & Human Values
- Vol. 24 (4) , 451-482
- https://doi.org/10.1177/016224399902400402
Abstract
Consensus conferences, also known as citizens’ panels—a collection of lay citizens akin to a jury but charged with deliberating on policy issues with a high technical content—are a potentially important way to conduct technology assessments, inform policy makers about public views of new technologies, and improve public understanding of and participation in technological decision making. The first citizens’ panel in the United States occurred in April 1997 on the issue of “Telecommunications and the Future of Democracy.” This article evaluates the impact of this citizens’ panel. The standard criteria to evaluate the impact of analyses focus on the “actual impact” and on the “impact on general thinking.” To these standard criteria, this article introduces the evaluation of two impacts related to learning: impact on the training of knowledgeable personnel and the interaction with lay knowledge. The impact evaluation is based on a nearly comprehensive set of semistructured telephone interviews with the participants in the panel.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stabilizing the Boundary between US Politics and Science:Social Studies of Science, 1999
- The paradox of policy analysis: If it is not used, why do we produce so much of it?Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1999
- The OTA story: The agency perspectiveTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 1997
- Introduction: The end of OTA and the future of technology assessmentTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 1997
- Lessons in technology assessmentTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 1997
- Critical appraisal in science and technology policy analysis: The example of Science, the endless frontierPolicy Sciences, 1997
- Public Management Research: The Triumph of Art over ScienceJournal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1994
- Participatory Analysis, Democracy, and Technological Decision MakingScience, Technology, & Human Values, 1993
- The Critical Appraisal of Scientific Inquiries with Policy ImplicationsScience, Technology, & Human Values, 1985