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The purpose of this study is to question whether liberal political
theories ought to inform the way policymakers and administrators
analyze risk in proposed courses of environmental practice. In
order to explore the relationship of liberal theory to rational
practice in environmental policy, this project examines the risk
analysis used to approve the genetically engineered bovine growth
hormone in American agricultural policy. The Political Theories of
Risk Analysis suggests that American environmental public policy is
attempting to assess danger with an incomplete notion of utility,
to eliminate the hazards of society with an inadequate contractual
justification of political authority, and to publicly debate
accepted levels of risk with an unfulfilled critical social theory.
Because environmental risk analyses are incorrectly perceived as
technically rational and socially apolitical, they result in
practices that are muddled and misdirected. Making theoretical
foundations explicit, however, could lead to improved practice.
Public policy and administrative decisions regarding agricultural
biotechnologies should and can function with more concern for
democratic values. The Political Theories of Risk Analysis is for
environmental scientists, philosophers, public policy planners,
applied ethicists, political scientists and environmentalists.
The purpose of this study is to question whether liberal political
theories ought to inform the way policymakers and administrators
analyze risk in proposed courses of environmental practice. In
order to explore the relationship of liberal theory to rational
practice in environmental policy, this project examines the risk
analysis used to approve the genetically engineered bovine growth
hormone in American agricultural policy. The Political Theories of
Risk Analysis suggests that American environmental public policy is
attempting to assess danger with an incomplete notion of utility,
to eliminate the hazards of society with an inadequate contractual
justification of political authority, and to publicly debate
accepted levels of risk with an unfulfilled critical social theory.
Because environmental risk analyses are incorrectly perceived as
technically rational and socially apolitical, they result in
practices that are muddled and misdirected. Making theoretical
foundations explicit, however, could lead to improved practice.
Public policy and administrative decisions regarding agricultural
biotechnologies should and can function with more concern for
democratic values. The Political Theories of Risk Analysis is for
environmental scientists, philosophers, public policy planners,
applied ethicists, political scientists and environmentalists.
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