A Pragmatist Orientation for the Social Sciences in Climate Policy: How to Make Integrated Economic Assessments Serve Society

Cham: Springer Verlag (2016)
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Abstract

While economic and other social science expertise is indispensable for successful public policy-making regarding global climate change, social scientists face trade-offs between the scientific credibility, policy-relevance, and legitimacy of their policy advice. From a philosophical perspective, this book systematically addresses these trade-offs and other crucial challenges facing the integrated economic assessments of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Based on John Dewey’s pragmatist philosophy and an analysis of the value-laden nature and reliability of climate change economics, the book develops a refined science-policy model and specific guidelines for these assessments of climate policy options. The core idea is to scientifically explore the various practical implications of alternative climate policy pathways in an interdisciplinary manner, together with diverse stakeholders. This could facilitate an iterative, deliberative public learning process concerning disputed policy issues. This volume makes novel contributions to three strands of the literature: the philosophy of science in policy; the philosophy of economics; and debates about the design of scientific assessments, including the continuous IPCC reform debate. This work is thus interesting for philosophers and other scholars reflecting on the science-policy interface, but also for assessment practitioners, climate policy-makers, and economists. The science-policy approach developed in this volume has already influenced the recent socio-economic IPCC assessment.

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Chapters

The Need for an Integrated Economic Assessment of Climate Policy Options

This chapter indicates the need for appropriate integrated economic assessments to support climate policy-making. A normative point of departure for this is John Dewey’s concept of a scientifically well-informed, collective regulation of indirect consequences of human actions – as the essence of “th... see more

Fundamental Perils for Scientific Assessments

There are some fundamental perils for the role of the sciences in policy, which also affect economic assessments. Based on a discussion of these perils, this chapter identifies the key challenge of bridging scientific expertise and public policy. Section 3.1 provides the background for this by descr... see more

Elements of a Guideline for Future Integrated Economic Assessments of the IPCC

Part IV identifies , and reflects on , some elements of a more specific guideline for improving the integrated economic assessments by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change . This is based on the preceding analysis of the challenges faced by these assessments . A short check list for integra... see more

Prevalent Action-Guiding Models of Scientific Expertise in Policy

Science-policy models guide the practice of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and other science-policy institutions. Such science-policy models are primarily about the general competence, responsibility and legitimate role of scientific experts, policymakers and other players at the scie... see more

Pragmatism: Objectivity Despite Fact/value Entanglement

Can the pragmatic science-policy model cluster that emphasises democratic public participation and deliberation ensure reliable, politically legitimate and useful scientific assessments, despite the implied ethical and social value judgements? Section 6.1 will analyse the weaknesses of some variatio... see more

An Evaluation of the IPCC WG III Assessments

This chapter identifies some challenges, strengths and weaknesses of Working Group III contributions to the Assessment Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change . The focus is on the Fourth and Fifth assessment cycle of the IPCC. For this purpose, the evaluation criteria and heuristic... see more

Ethics in Climate Economics: Balance or Bias?

This chapter aims to analyse the normative-ethical assumptions implied in the structure and scenarios of integrated assessment models , as well as the IAM-based studies used in the recent assessments by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change . This will be done according to the framework deve... see more

Understanding and Evaluating the IAM-Based Economics

Deepening the problem analysis of the previous parts, Part III analyses both the Working Group III contribution to the Assessment Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the underlying economics of climate change . This chapter will introduce: the economics of climate change , w... see more

Fact/value Conflation and the Danger of the Traditional Models

The decisionist and technocratic models of scientific expertise in policy are critically evaluated in this chapter regarding their potential to address the major pitfalls of scientific expertise in policy. The mistaken philosophical assumption of a fact/value dichotomy, which is underlying these two... see more

Introduction

This chapter provides an overview of the book, with its essential relevance and approach . The novelty and timeliness of this study are also highlighted . Scientific assessments are valuable as tools to inform the public on complex policy issues such as climate change where so much is at stake for s... see more

Trust Them? The Epistemic Quality of Climate Economics

This chapter evaluates the scientific and epistemic quality of integrated assessment models and related economic studies in light of Deweyan-Putnamian pragmatism. This is mainly done by analysing the treatment of three different types of uncertainty , explained in Sect. 9.1. Section 9.2 discusses te... see more

Potential Implications of the IPCC Reform: Deliberative Learning and Difficulties of In-Depth Policy Assessment

This chapter concludes the enquiry of this book into a new guideline for integrated economic assessments. The proposals for future integrated economic assessments made in Chap. 11 are briefly evaluated in light of the assumed direct effects of these proposals regarding the general norms for scientif... see more

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Five Pragmatist Insights on Scientific Expertise.Mathias Girel - 2020 - Philosophical Inquiries 8 (2):151-176.

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