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The Navigator Network A Futurewatch Case Study

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Title: The Navigator Network A Futurewatch Case Study


1
The Navigator NetworkA Futurewatch Case Study
  • Jane Cameron
  • Ministry of Research, Science Tech
  • New Zealand
  • 2nd Annual Seville FTA Seminar
  • Sept 28-29, 2006

2
What is the Navigator Network?
3
  • The Navigator Network is a New Zealand-based
    national ST scanning network.
  • It has been set up in association with the
    Ministry of Research, Science and Technology
    (MoRST) to
  • identify emerging science trends and innovations
    (particularly in biotechnology and
    nanotechnology) and
  • to further explore those that may raise
    significant economic, social or environmental
    issues for New Zealand.

4
  • The project brings together individuals and
    organisations from the science and policy
    communities with insights into the dynamics of
    emerging science, technology and social change,
    both globally and in New Zealand.
  • The primary end-user of the Networks findings
    are government agencies. Findings from the
    network provide input for policy and operations
    across government, including science policy,
    regulatory settings and public engagement.

5
Background What are the roots of this
initiative?
6
The Royal Commission on Genetic Modification
  • In 2000, the New Zealand Government convened a
    Royal Commission on Genetic Modification to look
    into and report on the issues surrounding GM in
    New Zealand.
  • The Royal Commission recommended that New Zealand
    develop a capability for what they called
    biotechnology futurewatch

7
The New Zealand Biotechnology Strategy
  • The Government endorsed this recommendation in
    the New Zealand Biotechnology Strategy (2003)
  • MoRST was charged with the implementation of
    futurewatch to strengthen ways for New Zealand
    to forsee and make timely responses to emerging
    issues and opportunities relevant to
    biotechnology

8
What do we mean by the term
futurewatch?
9
The futurewatch approach is about
  • looking at the edge identifying potentially
    important things at the margins of current
    thinking, including both future issues and things
    at the periphery.
  • in an open way bringing in a range of
    perspectives, considering uncertainties as well
    as certainties, being mindful of assumptions,
    imagining different possible futures, and leaving
    room for creativity
  • that considers the big picture such as
    interactions in whole systems, thinking about
    risks as well as opportunities, and considering
    wider time horizons (history as well as future).

10
Methodological Approaches
  • The over-arching term futurewatch therefore
    encompasses a range of futures methodologies.
  • Most specifically, as a means of gathering
    information thinking about emerging ST trends
  • Environmental scanning
  • Systems thinking
  • And as approaches to assessing exploring the
    implications of these
  • Technology assessment
  • Dialogic methods to facilitate conversations
    about the implications of emerging technologies

11
Implementing Biotechnology Futurewatch
12
Phase I OrientationBuilding Internal Capability
(2003-04)
  • In Phase I of the futurewatch implementation we
    oriented ourselves and built internal
    capability by completing a very broad global scan
    of emerging developments in biotechnology.
  • The scan Futurewatch Biotechnologies to 2025
    identifies emerging biotechnology trends in
    Health, Primary Production, Industrial
    Environmental Biotechnology and Security and
    Defence

13
Impacts of Biotechnologies to 2025
  • The trends and issues identified in the 2025
    report have
  • provided a baseline of trends with which to
    compare the emerging developments identified by
    the Navigator Network
  • resulted in follow-up work in stem cells and
    industrial biotechnology and
  • been used as an input for the OECDs Bioeconomy
    to 2030 project.

14
(No Transcript)
15
Phase IIPutting in place a distributed ST
scanning networkThe Navigator Network
16
MoRSTs has four key objectives for the
Navigator Network
  • Support discussion and a collective understanding
    of new and emerging science and technologies, how
    they may influence New Zealands future, and what
    actions may be required to address their
    challenges and opportunities.
  • Gather, synthesise and share information and
    support linkages in the exchange and convergence
    of ideas between policy and science communities.
  • Support the development of a culture of early
    thinking across government and more broadly
  • Develop, apply and profile a New Zealand approach
    to environmental scanning.

17
At the core of the Navigator Network is the
central scanning activity
  • To date a key focus of the Network has been to
    appoint and train a core group of scanners
    researchers and experts active and aware of
    developments in biotechnology, nanotechnology and
    the socio-political context for science.

18
The Network is specifically designed for New
Zealand conditions
19
Interpreting the New Zealand context
  • On the whole New Zealanders are a
  • technologically literate people with a
  • good existing awareness of emerging
  • technology.
  • New Zealanders also place importance
  • on considering developments in a wide
  • social, environmental, cultural and
  • economic context.

20
New Zealanders have a particularly deep
connection with the natural environment. This in
turn has a strong influence on the set of values
we bring to our views on emerging
biotechnologies.
21
Royal Commission on Genetic Modification
New Zealand has a small, horizontally connected
government sector. Connections between agencies
are therefore relatively easy to foster. A
particular focus of these horizontal
relationships are complex, cross-cutting
issues, like emerging technologies.
22
New Zealands science capacity is predominantly
in public owned research institutes and
universities. But, compared with other
countries, there is limited capacity in central
government.
23
New Zealand has a strong biological-base to our
economy with around 65 of total goods exports
coming from the primary sector agriculture,
horticulture, forestry, fishing food
beverage.
24
Specific Design Features to Achieve Outcomes
25
Design Feature OneA New Zealand-centric
strategic focus
  • While the scope of the Navigator Network broadly
    encompasses biotechnology and nanotechnology,
    areas of strategic focus for the New Zealand
    context have been selected.
  • Given the importance of agriculture to New
    Zealands economic societal wellbeing the
    initial strategic focus of the Network is
    agricultural biotechnology and food and their
    interface with the environmental and social
    context.

26
Design Feature TwoArms length from Government
  • Although MoRST is an active participant in the
    project team, the Network is managed by an
    independent team.
  • Placing the management of the Network external to
    government was deliberate to ensure that it
    could, if necessary, provide independent advice
    which can challenge existing institutional
    knowledge, world-views and horizons.

27
Design Feature ThreeA Knowledge Creation
rather than Data Mining Approach
  • Many of our objectives in designing this
    initiative are more oriented towards achieving
    softer outcomes (like supporting discussion and
    shared understanding between the policy and
    science communities)
  • The process of interpreting the implications of
    the scanning reports for New Zealand is
    therefore, geared more towards creating knowledge
    through social processes than harder-edged
    scientometric data-mining technical assessment.

28
The Scanning Reporting Process
Scanning Workshop Wider set of
participants Theme areas (ie. agricultural
stakeholders, policy-makers and opinion
leaders) Workshop discussion using trends
identified in Draft Scanning Report and
discussion of the implications of these for New
Zealand.
Draft Scanning Report Quarterly reporting by
contracted scanners Synthesis of scanning
observations into broad trends, thematic areas
Updated Scanning Report Report updated to
reflect value-add from the Workshop process
29
Design Feature FourFacilitating Uptake of
Network Reporting
  • To facilitate uptake government officials are
    explicitly embedded in the process. This is
    achieved in two ways, officials act both as
  • scanners feeding their own scanning
    observations into the reporting cycles and thus
    capturing the policy context and
  • interpreters more senior officials attending
    the workshop sessions to offer their own insights
    into future implications for New Zealand.
  • The results of the Network are also channelled,
    where possible, through relevant existing
    networks and channels such as cross-departmental
    officials groups

30
Design Feature FiveBuilding Futures Capability
  • One of the objectives of the Navigator Network is
    to build futures capability across the science
    and government sectors.
  • A primary foci of the Network is therefore to
    focus on training and developing the skills of
    the core group of scanners.
  • Putting the effort into training is resulting in
    more robust reporting as the scanners are
    learning over time the truly new compared to
    the new to me.

31
Design Feature SixBuilt in Action Learning
  • The Network has a built in action research
    component. This emphasis on reflective practice
    gives this initiative a degree of flexibility
    which ensures that it is constantly focusing on
    whats working best to achieve the projects
    objectives and can re-orient its course
    accordingly.

32
Whats Working Well?
33
The Network is already resulting in positive
impacts
  • Were successfully building futures capability in
    the science and policy spheres
  • Stronger linkages are being built between the
    policy and science communities
  • Network outputs are being channeled into a range
    of cross-government forums (both from
    methodological and subject specific
    perspectives) and
  • New cross-sectoral discussions about the future
    of food are in train that wouldnt otherwise
    have occurred.

34
Next Steps
35
Evaluation planned early 2007
  • The types of questions that will be explored
    further in the evaluation include
  • Have better or more timely decisions have been
    made because of the discussions or insights
    arising from the Navigator Network?
  • Does this system approach to scanning better
    support governments readiness to emerging
    technology developments than existing
    organisational approaches?

36
For further information
  • The Navigator Network
  • http//www.navigatornetwork.net.nz
  • The Ministry of Research, Science and Technology
  • http//www.morst.govt.nz/current-work/futurewatch/

37
Key Contacts
  • Ministry of Research, Science and Technology
  • Katherine Silvester Principal Adviser
  • katherine.silvester_at_morst.govt.nz
  • Jane Cameron Adviser, Futurewatch
  • jane.cameron_at_morst.govt.nz
  • Navigator Network Project Team
  • Dr Barbara Nicholas Project Leader
  • barbara.nicholas_at_nicholas.net.nz
  • Karen Cronin Project Team
  • Navigator Network karen.cronin_at_paradise.net.nz
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