8/ this engagement at the history of these debates pre-dating gene editing, the social and economic contexts where editing is happening, social justice, intersecting issues eg climate, #CrisprConsensus
9/ Next up is @samira_kiani1 looking at how to engage widely. She's a genetic engineer and video maker. See #codeofthewild which is being connected to an online platform which allows you to share and discuss different elements of the video #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1 10/ This means you can republish your own version of the film as a response back to the original video, aiming to develop a two way conversation >wow, the potential seems amazing #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1 11/ next up is Kelly Ormond is an ethicist and genetic counsellor. They've been doing empirical research on ethics and what different groups think about gene editing #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1 12/ in 2016 surveyed attitudes of global gene ethicists, and most of them are supportive of somatic research and clinical use. Only 32% were supportive of clinical translation of human germline research - they thought this was high, but may explain later events #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1 13/ Also surveyed people with inherited retinal conditions and those who had acquired them later, and found that individuals answered the questions through their own life experience >so responses v varied #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1 14/ and find that families with children with disabilities have conflicting and conflicted views. Esp where children had a good quality of life but it was limited #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1 15/ Oh, Ben Hurlbut is also on the panel and is going to be talking about his and @SJasanoff's idea for a global observatory, which is trying to expand the idea of what society is, of the types of questions which must be asked etc #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1@SJasanoff 16/ this observatory needs to involve people with multidisciplinary backgrounds, it needs to bring people who don't normally engage together, and it must be cross-cultural #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1@SJasanoff 18/ this observatory will collect more perspectives; analyse the foundations of peoples' thoughts; convene excluded voices beyond science and ethics professionals #CrisprConsensus
Q: how stop the participants in your work from self-selecting and how you take account of it when you're analysing what you're hearing #CrisprConsensus
A: Katie Hassan: the conversation about germ line editing is broader than this, it's about visions for the future, histories of injustice etc, so starting somewhere is a way of expanding #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1@SJasanoff@JennyMerchant 26/ The focus of the answers is on making sure that decision-makers are aware of the engagement, and amplifying voices not normally heard, trying to support scientists understand the public and visa versa #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1@SJasanoff@JennyMerchant 27/ and a critical question when you're thinking about how to get action on what the public are saying is also who is making the decisions, implying that power needs to shift, #CrisprConsensus
@samira_kiani1@SJasanoff@JennyMerchant 28/ Q:is it possible to separate what people think is right or wrong, from what the government should decide about what should be legal or not
A: Kelly did survey part of this, but sorry, missed the nuance of her answer #CrisprConsensus
29/ There's a question online about the role of fiction, can it accurately represent the science and support engagement?
A: Can be an entry point, but it must be supplemented so that minor details don't overwhelm the discussion #CrisprConsensus
30/ we shouldn't just worry about narratives that raise fear, but also those that raise false hope, or hype the benefits #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