1/ Next panel starting - looking at "Governance and its Gaps", involving Ben Hurlbut, Dana Carroll, Alta Charo, Dafna Feinholz, @laurencelwoff, Nora Schultz - sorry if I've missed twitter handles #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 2/ We're being polled online on the questions "what are the most/ least useful forms of public engagement"
Sorry, not a good question, useful for what purpose? They all have their place? #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 3/ Ben Hurlbut starts panel off as the moderator. Do we spend enough time asking what questions need asking of the public, or learning from other areas. This panel will look at this. #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 4/ Starting with @laurencelwoff from the Council of Europe, focuses on the protection of human rights, and in 80s started focusing on biomedicine, bring both benefits, but bring concerns about the possible use and misuse of the technology. #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 5/ COE sees progress and protection of human rights as being intimately linked. Led to Oviedo Conventionhttps://www.coe.int/en/web/bioethics/oviedo-convention #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 8/ She notes that the online poll we filled in earlier about types of engagement didn't include voting "which is the most direct form of all" > for me, voting focuses very much on immediate concerns for voters; it's bad at engaging on future visions #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 9/ she's exploring the challenge of focusing governance of these technologies in existing institutions. Risk is that if ends up in places like FDA then focus is on risks and not the wider concerns, such as religious objections, for eg> but +1 from me #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 10/ She's noting that much of the work on gene editing is very focused on experts trying to make sense of the science, and how law and policy is developing, and there is no space for public dialogue #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 11/ key technical q: how do we know when we know enough to judge the risks, though there are ethical issues embedded in this; what is safe enough? #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 12/ she's now explaining why individual governments don't have sovereignty over this issue, if you ban it, what do you do if a citizen goes elsewhere for treatment, if you allow it, how do you stop yourself becoming a 'risk haven'? #CrisprConsensus
@laurencelwoff 13/ she's noting that public debate does have an impact, speaking to a right wing senator who was against stem cell research until a constituent with a son with a disability who challenged him >this is a narrow form of impact though, implies engagement must #CrisprConsensus
14/ >this is a narrow form of impact though, implies engagement must fit with the politics of our representatives, and risks cutting out more challenging voices, either of the majority, or vulnerable communities. #CrisprConsensus
15/ Next up is Dafna Feinholz who is from Unesco but not talking on behalf of Unesco.
Unesco is much more than protecting heritage, has the same principles for science: to foster international collaboration. It's part of UN so underpinned by Human Rights #CrisprConsensus
16/ So since early 90s UNESCA has a Bioethics Panel, aiming to bring a body of international experts which is multidisciplinary, to simulate the real world and identifying the ethical challenges arising, to advise governments on how to deal with it #CrisprConsensus
17/ Ben noting that one of the underlying threads is a set of questions on what the shared values are. @noraschultz being asked to reflect on this from a national, German, perspective #CrisprConsensus
@noraschultz 18/ Destruction of embryos for the production of stem cells is banned in Germany, but in early 90s debate arose of whether cell lines created in this way could be imported. This led to the creation of a national bioethics committee #CrisprConsensus
@noraschultz 20/ currently mapping arguments and the ethical considerations that relate to this with the aim of supporting public debate, to support people to understand where different debates and arguments are coming from
@noraschultz@HelenPallett@jasondchilvers 23/ The commission is charged with engaging with the ethics and governance of human germline editing, should the public believe it is acceptable > if I properly followed what he said. but raises questions of how we'll know if the public consent #CrisprConsensus
A: deciding who they will hear from is an ongoing conversation, they are deciding what sorts of engagement they need #CrisprConsensus
26/ > how can they possibly know who they need to hear from? Even for just the US and UK, the range of stakeholders is huge! There is a huge risk they'll not have any idea of minority views #CrisprConsensus
27/ we're getting deep into issues of how you evaluate risk vs benefit because one, the benefits might be immediate, the risks dispersed and falling on others. The answers depend on the regulatory regime #CrisprConsensus
28/ Q: how is meaningful dissent being incorporated, or will it just be withdrawal of consent (as with GMO I think he said) > this is an important question and relates to one of my comments earlier in this thread #CrisprConsensus
29/ @noraschultz highlights some procedural ways you might deal with this in ethics committees, for example. Important, but I think the question is wider, especially if experts are deciding who should and should not be engaged/ listened to #CrisprConsensus
@noraschultz 30/ Critical q from online, which is how we will govern this internationally. >Not sure there's an answer out there yet #CrisprConsensus
@noraschultz 31/ @laurancelwoff asking if we are even defining things the same. Ie public engagement (debate in CoE language) and the question which the public should be asked > we definitely aren't defining things the same and makes global governance much harder #CrisprConsensus
@noraschultz 32/ what does public opinion mean in your governance system is a critical question within this says Alta Charo >agree. And it's important to say that there isn't one answer here even in individual countries, its different in health systems than health research eg #CrisprConsensus
@noraschultz 33/ @noraschultz points to the @Sciencewise process for mitochondrial transfer as one way to go, but notes it was a very narrow question and gene editing very different.
@noraschultz@Sciencewise 34/ Dana Carroll has tried to illicit dissent, but need to be wary of loudest voices, and we also need to be wary of raising hopes from desperate families which leads to a push to allow the use of technology in areas where wider society might be uncomfortable #CrisprConsensus
If there's something relevant from a public engagement perspective I'll add to this thread
2/ Some prepared remarks from ED first. The law worked best, she says, when the publics' views are put front and centre of any data use #IfGDenham
3/ Big things on her desk are #transparency, #AI#algorithms and #BigData < I wonder how many of those are big things from the public's perspectives? Suspect outcomes and impacts are much more relevant, less about data #IfGDenham
1/ Looking forward to the launch of @GenomicsEngland's #newborndialogue report which starts in a few minutes. I'm going to be live tweeting. With over 1000 people signed up it's full, but you can follow along here
3/ If you are interested in finding out more about @sciencewise and the support it offers government bodies to engage the public effectively, you'll find that here - sciencewise.org.uk/about-sciencew…
Sitting in on the "Science and Society, 20 years on: legacy and lessons for a post-Covid world" conference. I'll try to tweet key points that strike me, but not live tweet to avoid spamming you buff.ly/3cnx13O 1/
Kicking off is @jameswilsdon reminding us that the reason for the event is that we are twenty years on since the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee published its seminal report on Science and Society. And the issues in there are still live publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ld… 2/
How do we balance the educational needs of children against
i. the health needs of teachers,
ii. the health needs of the wider population
iii. the wider economic impact?
2/ Whatever we decide will entail difficult choices which will affect different groups differently, in different ways and over very different timescales. At its starkest, the longer term education of our children vs short term economy?
What a choice, what an awful choice.
3/ But we need to make it, not debating it and trying to ignore it doesn't make the choice go away, it is just made by default, by the virus in fact
The Patch (@BBCRadio4) is a wimsical little programme set around the conceit of investigating a random postcode every episode 1/
The Patch just tackled homelessness in a time of Covid in London’s Square Mile bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0… 2/
The Patch just did for my understanding of homelessness what I think BBC news programmes and esp @BBCr4today should be doing day in day out instead of stupid short gotcha interviews presenting false balance 3/
I share your sense of outrage at what is happening in Portland. But I think that to blame deliberative democracy is to misunderstand what democracy is 1/
2/ Democracy isn't one thing. Here in the UK, through the 80s and 90s, those campaigning for greater democracy were focused on institutions: establishing a constitution, proportional representation, an elected House of Lords etc
3/ All of these things are important components of democracy, but they won't magically transform the UK into some sort of utopian democracy. Not on their own, and not even if they all happened