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recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-273582021-04-23T14:04:41Z The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard Knudsen, Odin K. Scandizzo, Pasquale L SOCIAL ACCOUNTING ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES ADVERSE EFFECTS ADVERSE IMPACTS ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESIS ARTICLE BASIC COMMUNITIES CONSUMER GROUPS CONSUMERS DAMAGES DECISION MAKING DESCRIPTION DISTRIBUTION FUNCTION ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS ECONOMIC MODELS ECONOMICS ELASTICITY ERROR EXPECTED VALUE EXPECTED VALUES GDP GDP PER CAPITA HYPOTHESIS TESTING INCOME INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVENTIONS LOGIC MARGINAL BENEFITS MARGINAL COST MARGINAL VALUE MORTALITY MOTIVATION NEW TECHNOLOGY 0 HYPOTHESIS OPPORTUNITY COST PROBABILITY PROBABILITY DENSITY PROBABILITY DENSITY FUNCTION PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION PRODUCTION PROCESS PROTECTIONISM PROTOCOL PUBLIC GOOD RANDOM VARIABLE RESEARCHERS SAFETY SIGNIFICANCE LEVEL SIMULATION SOCIAL COSTS TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE TEST PROCEDURE TRADITIONAL TECHNOLOGY UNIFORM DISTRIBUTION UNIT INCREASE Scientific progress offers tremendous potential benefits to society but also presents risks. While research focuses on how to manifest the benefits of any new technology, the outside community fears the consequences that technology may inadvertently have on social goods such as the environment, public health and security. To balance the benefits of the progress of science against the risks associated with its application is one of the major public policy challenges of the 21st century. In this paper, the author argues that the precautionary principle is an extension of the scientific method in the popperian tradition and has precedent in hypothesis testing. Under this framework, we then explore an approach that captures the essence of the weaker precautionary principle but also accounts for the 'unacceptable' outcome through the use of a social standard or threshold of harm. Under this methodology, a social standard is established and accounted for in the cost-benefit analysis. The existence of the social standard creates an additional cost or benefit to the assessment of a project. The report illustrates the methodology with a discussion of two cases: the 'mad cow' disease and the regulation on carbon emission. 2017-06-27T18:11:43Z 2017-06-27T18:11:43Z 2011 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/886341468275363519/The-precautionary-principle-and-the-social-standard http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27358 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research Middle East and North Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic SOCIAL
ACCOUNTING
ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES
ADVERSE EFFECTS
ADVERSE IMPACTS
ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESIS
ARTICLE
BASIC
COMMUNITIES
CONSUMER GROUPS
CONSUMERS
DAMAGES
DECISION MAKING
DESCRIPTION
DISTRIBUTION FUNCTION
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
ECONOMIC MODELS
ECONOMICS
ELASTICITY
ERROR
EXPECTED VALUE
EXPECTED VALUES
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
HYPOTHESIS TESTING
INCOME
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTIONS
LOGIC
MARGINAL BENEFITS
MARGINAL COST
MARGINAL VALUE
MORTALITY
MOTIVATION
NEW TECHNOLOGY
0 HYPOTHESIS
OPPORTUNITY COST
PROBABILITY
PROBABILITY DENSITY
PROBABILITY DENSITY FUNCTION
PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PROTECTIONISM
PROTOCOL
PUBLIC GOOD
RANDOM VARIABLE
RESEARCHERS
SAFETY
SIGNIFICANCE LEVEL
SIMULATION
SOCIAL COSTS
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
TEST PROCEDURE
TRADITIONAL TECHNOLOGY
UNIFORM DISTRIBUTION
UNIT INCREASE
spellingShingle SOCIAL
ACCOUNTING
ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES
ADVERSE EFFECTS
ADVERSE IMPACTS
ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESIS
ARTICLE
BASIC
COMMUNITIES
CONSUMER GROUPS
CONSUMERS
DAMAGES
DECISION MAKING
DESCRIPTION
DISTRIBUTION FUNCTION
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
ECONOMIC MODELS
ECONOMICS
ELASTICITY
ERROR
EXPECTED VALUE
EXPECTED VALUES
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
HYPOTHESIS TESTING
INCOME
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTIONS
LOGIC
MARGINAL BENEFITS
MARGINAL COST
MARGINAL VALUE
MORTALITY
MOTIVATION
NEW TECHNOLOGY
0 HYPOTHESIS
OPPORTUNITY COST
PROBABILITY
PROBABILITY DENSITY
PROBABILITY DENSITY FUNCTION
PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PROTECTIONISM
PROTOCOL
PUBLIC GOOD
RANDOM VARIABLE
RESEARCHERS
SAFETY
SIGNIFICANCE LEVEL
SIMULATION
SOCIAL COSTS
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
TEST PROCEDURE
TRADITIONAL TECHNOLOGY
UNIFORM DISTRIBUTION
UNIT INCREASE
Knudsen, Odin K.
Scandizzo, Pasquale L
The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
description Scientific progress offers tremendous potential benefits to society but also presents risks. While research focuses on how to manifest the benefits of any new technology, the outside community fears the consequences that technology may inadvertently have on social goods such as the environment, public health and security. To balance the benefits of the progress of science against the risks associated with its application is one of the major public policy challenges of the 21st century. In this paper, the author argues that the precautionary principle is an extension of the scientific method in the popperian tradition and has precedent in hypothesis testing. Under this framework, we then explore an approach that captures the essence of the weaker precautionary principle but also accounts for the 'unacceptable' outcome through the use of a social standard or threshold of harm. Under this methodology, a social standard is established and accounted for in the cost-benefit analysis. The existence of the social standard creates an additional cost or benefit to the assessment of a project. The report illustrates the methodology with a discussion of two cases: the 'mad cow' disease and the regulation on carbon emission.
format Working Paper
author Knudsen, Odin K.
Scandizzo, Pasquale L
author_facet Knudsen, Odin K.
Scandizzo, Pasquale L
author_sort Knudsen, Odin K.
title The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard
title_short The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard
title_full The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard
title_fullStr The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard
title_full_unstemmed The Precautionary Principle and the Social Standard
title_sort precautionary principle and the social standard
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/886341468275363519/The-precautionary-principle-and-the-social-standard
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27358
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