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An uneasy balance

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Since advisors are chosen to reflect Administration ideology, is advice balanced? ... Limited autonomy and strongly influenced by Administration agendas. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An uneasy balance


1
An uneasy balance
  • Science advising in the federal government and
    the politicization of science
  • Karen F. Greif, Dept of Biology

2
Challenges in science policy-making
  • Rapid technological changes that create novel
    issues
  • Complex technologies that are difficult for
    non-scientists to understand
  • Concerns that consequences of decisions may be
    irreversible (Pandoras box?)
  • Public worries about threats to health and safety
  • New developments that challenge deeply held
    social, ethical and religious values

3
Scientific input in decision-making
  • Policy for science federal funding for
    scientific research
  • Determines directions of research
  • Science for policy science advising
  • Federal advisory committees
  • Congressional testimony and advice
  • Lobbying

4
Science Advising in the Executive Branch
  • Assistant to the President for Science and
    Technology (unfilled in the Bush administration)
  • Director of the Office of Science and Technology
    (OSTP) John Marburger
  • National Science and Technology Council
  • Presidents Council on Science and Technology
    (PCAST)
  • Presidents Council on Bioethics
  • Cabinet Directors and Administrators

5
Does advising work in the Executive Branch?
  • Depends on the interest of the President
  • Without the ear of the President, no advisor
    will be effective
  • Since advisors are chosen to reflect
    Administration ideology, is advice balanced?
  • Delays in filling positions
  • Over 500 President-appointed senior level
    appointments overall!
  • Rigorous background checks
  • Requirements for Senate confirmation
  • Low salaries

6
Science and Congress
  • Budget decisions (Policy for science)
  • Legislation on science-informed issues
  • With advice from
  • Congressional staffers or outside experts
  • Government support agencies
  • Government Accountability Office (GAO)
  • Office of Technology Assessment (OTA, (closed
    1995))
  • Independent organizations
  • National Research Council (NRC) of the National
    Academies of Science (NAS, NAE, IOM)
  • Brookings Inst., Heritage Fdn., Cato Inst., etc
    (all with political agendas)

7
Federal Agencies
  • Role is to create functional policy in response
    to new laws
  • For the biological sciences DHHS (includes the
    NIH, FDA, CDC) National Science Foundation
    (NSF) Dept. of Agriculture EPA DOD
    (bioterrorism policy) Dept. of the Interior
    (FWS), etc
  • Limited autonomy and strongly influenced by
    Administration agendas. Congress can block
    activities by limiting budgets.

8
Advisory Committees and FACA
  • Hundreds of standing committees focus on science
    and technology issues
  • Ad-hoc committees may be established on new
    topics
  • The Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA 1972)
  • Limits numbers of committees
  • Requires transparency in deliberations
  • Mandates that committee membership be balanced
    with representatives of accomplishment and
    expertise

9
What is a good policy?
  • An effective policy should be cost-effective and
    fair, place limited demands on government, and
    provide assurance to the public that its goals
    will be met.
  • An effective policy may represent a compromise
    between competing viewpoints.

10
Science and Politics
  • From the scientists perspective policy making
    should involve careful consideration of
    scientific data and result in policies that are
    in line with the findings and recommendations of
    science. However, scientific data are rarely
    complete and some degree of uncertainty is
    inevitable.
  • From the politicians viewpoint science is one
    piece of input in the political process and may
    be trumped by political values and necessities.
    If scientists cannot provide clear answers, then
    their advice is of limited value.

11
The selective use of science
  • If the data do not support an Administrations
    position
  • order additional studies (delay, delay)
  • claim that the data are based on poor research
  • discredit the scientists who conducted the work
  • claim that the data are biased
  • ignore the data

12
Skewing federal advisory committees
  • Dont empanel anyone (no committee, no conflicts)
  • Claim that any scientist receiving federal
    research support is tainted by an agenda to
    gain additional funding (limits expertise)
  • Dont appoint committee members who hold opinions
    that differ from that of an Administration
    (litmus tests)

13
Some historical examples
  • Pres. Richard Nixon threw all science advising
    out of the White House because he objected to
    left-leaning scientists who made
    recommendations against his own projects.
    Congress mandated the establishment of the OSTP
    in 1976 in response.
  • Pres. Ronald Reagan failed to fill many critical
    science advisory positions to block enforcement
    of regulations unpopular with his Administration
  • Many conservatives claim that Pres. Bill Clinton
    stacked his advisory committees with
    pro-regulatory scientists

14
Pres. George W. Bush and a new level of
politicization of science?
  • The failure to reappoint two members of the
    Presidents Council on Bioethics who supported
    human cloning and stem cell research
  • Claims of political litmus tests for candidates
    for science advisory committees
  • Suppression of portions of reports on global
    warming and other sensitive issues
  • Manipulation of agency informational websites
    (CDC and reproductive health)
  • Blocking the World Health Organization from
    directly approaching scientists to serve on
    advisory committees (Director of DHHS must now
    nominate individuals)

15
What can be done?
  • Improve science advising for Congress to reduce
    the dominance of the Executive Branch
    (re-establish the OTA)
  • Regularize science advising in the Executive
    Branch by supporting changes in the approval
    process
  • Insulate committees from ideology, but permit
    differing interpretations
  • Involve the public more in deliberations

16
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17
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