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Balancing expertise: scientific advice in an international organisation

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Balancing expertise: scientific advice in an international organisation. Katie Smallwood ... Supervisors: Julian Perry Robinson & Daniel Feakes. 2. Dissertation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Balancing expertise: scientific advice in an international organisation


1
Balancing expertise scientific advice in an
international organisation
  • Katie Smallwood
  • Harvard Sussex Program, SPRU
  • Supervisors Julian Perry Robinson Daniel Feakes

2
Dissertation
  • The capacity of an international regime to keep
    abreast of and respond to technical change.

3
Context The CWC and the OPCW
  • 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention
  • Entered into force 1997
  • 184 states parties
  • Verified disarmament and non-proliferation under
    intrusive inspection system
  • Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
    Weapons
  • 3 organs the Conference of States Parties the
    Executive Council and the Technical Secretariat
  • 500 permanent Secretariat staff (about half are
    inspectors)
  • Director-General at the Secretariats head

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The OPCWs Scientific Advisory Board (SAB)
  • 25 independent members proposed by states
    parties, selected by Director-General
  • Appointed on the basis of their expertise in the
    particular scientific fields relevant to the
    implementation of the Convention
  • Maximum membership two terms of three years
  • In operation since 1998 with one formal meeting a
    year and additional Temporary Working Groups to
    address specific issues

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10
Thesis
  • Are scientific advisory boards actually useful
    when operating on an international level (and
    therefore in a highly politicised arena)?
  • Concern regarding the impact of ST changes on
    the implementation of the CWC (e.g. Wheelis,
    2002 Parshall, 2002 IUPAC, 2002 Nguyen 2005
    IUPAC, 2007)
  • But is the OPCWs Scientific Advisory Board the
    appropriate place for these to be addressed?

11
Decision pathways
  • Where do the questions originate from?
  • Framing
  • Discussion within the Board
  • How are the Boards conclusions reported?
  • What happens next?

12
Functioning
  • Membership participation
  • Representation
  • Geographic
  • Fields of expertise
  • Sectoral
  • Type of advice monolithic? Pluralistic?
  • Independence
  • Intersessional programmes of work, memory

13
Politicising science
  • Within the Board
  • Framing of the questions
  • Wariness about certain subjects
  • Topics discussed
  • Outside of the Board
  • Political associations with scientific positions
  • Skepticism
  • Claim to cognitive authority ?? (Jasanoff,
    1987)

14
Consequences?
  • The Second Review Conference requested the
    Council, through a meeting of governmental
    experts open to all States Parties, to consider
    the report by the Scientific Advisory Board which
    the Director-General had forwarded to the Second
    Review Conference.
  • Standing committee of governmental experts?
  • Looks likely to happen as precedent set in 2004,
    and now confirmed

15
Conclusions
  • So far, the OPCWs Scientific Advisory Board has
    only been effective in influencing policy on low
    impact issues (politically speaking)
  • Politically charged issues are handled with
    clumsiness both in the framing of the tasks and
    in the ensuing discussion
  • Most members are ill-prepared for the meetings
  • Political knee-jerks could undermine the
    authority of the Board
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