Title: Deliberative Legitimacy and the Governance of Biobanks
1Deliberative Legitimacy and the Governance of
Biobanks
- Susan Dodds
- University of Wollongong
- Rachel A Ankeny
- Universtiy of Adelaide
2Outline of Paper
- What is Big Picture Bioethics?
- Legitimacy on bioethics policy in pluralistic
democracies - Roles of public participation
- Forms of public engagement
- Democratic deliberation and justification
- Biobanks, issues raised
- Privacy, consent, governance, trust
- Conclusion Deliberation towards the best policy
justification
3What Is Big Picture Bioethics?
- Focuses on novel approaches to the
ethical/political analysis of health
policy-making - Integrates diverse disciplinary perspectives,
resulting in new bioethics methodologies - Comparative analyses of policy-making processes
and content (Australia and Canada) - Co-investigators Susan Dodds (University of
Wollongong), Rachel Ankeny (University of
Adelaide), Françoise Baylis and Jocelyn Downie
(Dalhousie University)
4Key Features of Big Picture Bioethics
- Exploration of the justification of policy
processes that lead to regulation (or decisions
not to regulate) - Investigation of the conditions that contribute
to the legitimacy of policy - Sensitivity to the social and political context
of policy debates - Ethical focus on process, not just outcomes
5Aim a normative political philosophical approach
to public policy-making
- Desiderata
- Determinate (if not definitive) policy outcome
- Public justifiability of policy
- Recognition of the fact of ethical disagreement
- Relative legitimacy
- Process viewed as open to concerns of all those
affected - Those affected and policy makers are able to
articulate why the policy is thought to be
justified
6Ethical disagreement, bioethics policy and the
demands of democracy
- Bioethics policy as a challenge to general
theories of legitimacy of state institutions - Not addressing structural legitimacy, but
legitimacy of specific policy on contested
issues - which humans are protected by the state
distribution and use of public resources control
over information relating to individuals
determining whether or not an entity is one that
the state will treat as having moral
significance, etc - Source of government or regulatory interest
defended by reference to - the states role as provider of welfare services,
- as protector of citizens individual rights,
- as defender of a common way or shared set of
values.
7What Makes Policy Legitimate?
- Legitimacy is grounded in the processes of
decision-making including - Recognised formal process (formal legitimacy)
- Determining who is affected and what is actually
at stake for them, based on their input not just
relying on experts (participatory legitimacy) - Articulating and testing claims directed toward a
common end (deliberative legitimacy) - Active participation by affected publics engaging
in deliberative process towards common end
accurate record of process and outcome (internal
legitimacy) - Developing a policy recommendation which is
justified by appeal to previous processes
particularly deliberative input (justificatory
legitimacy)
8Participation
- Role of participation in establishing legitimacy
of policy is to avoid pre-judging policy
processes and outcomes in areas where - We dont know enough about who is affected
- We arent clear about the values that they hold
- Nor do we know how their values may be affected
by various scientific and other developments - Process of participation should allow genuine
inclusion and contribution by all those who may
be affected
9Head, B. W. (2007) Community Engagement
Participation on WhoseTerms? AJPS 42 (3) 441-454
445.
10Deliberation and its Constraints
- Deliberative approaches emphasise the
legitimation of policy that comes from the
transformation of interests through processes of - collective decision making by all those who
will be affected by the decision or their
representatives this is the democratic part.
Alsoit includes decision making by means of
arguments offered by and to participants who are
committed to the values of rationality and
impartiality this is the deliberative part.
(Elster, 1998, 8)
11Ideal Deliberative Democracy
- Processes of deliberation take place in
argumentative form, that is, through the
regulated exchange of information and reasons
among parties who introduce and critically test
proposals. - Deliberations are inclusive and publicAll of
those who are possibly affected by the decisions
have equal chances to enter and take part. - Deliberations are free of any external coercion
- Deliberations are free of any internal coercion
that could detract from the equality of the
participants. Each has an equal opportunity to be
heard, to introduce topics, to make
contributions, to suggest and criticize
proposals. (Habermas)
12Constraints on Deliberation
- We arent in ideal speech situations
- None of us are perfectly rational
- Significant ethical, political, and social
disagreements exist - We arent skilled in the culture of deliberation
and public reasoning
13Justificatory Liberalism
- Duty to explain to one another.. how the
principles and policies they advocate and vote
for can be supported by the political values of
public reason (Rawls) - The moral lodestar of liberalism is the project
of public justification. Macedo - To respect another person as an end is to insist
that coercive or political principles be just as
justifiable to that person as they are to us.
Equal respect involves treating all persons, to
which such principles are to apply in this way
(Larmore)
14Attributes of More Legitimate Policy Processes
- Direct input to find out what matters to the
people affected by policy - Promoting public understanding of science
- Inclusive engagement (attention to systematic
disadvantage) - Ensuring discursive participation (fora for
engagement) - Fostering conditions for respectful deliberation
and public trust in process - Providing reasons for policy decisions
(contestable justification) - Review over time to capture changes in values,
etc.
15Contested deliberation where legitimacy not
realised?
- Some ethically contentious issues where the
development of policy that meets a threshold
level of legitimacy is impossible - Discursive modus vivendi agreements (Ivison)
- discursive because they emerge from the
constellation of discourses and registers present
in the public sphere at any given time, and
subject to at least some kind of reflexive
control by competent actors and modus vivendi
because they are always provisional, open to
contestation and by definition incompletely
theorized (Ivison)
16Biobanks Linked biological samples and/or health
records from a large epidemiological cohort
- Biological samples
- Pathology samples collected for clinical purposes
- Samples collected for routine screening
- Samples donated for research
- Donation on death
- Health data
- Genetic records pedigree, family medical history
- Environmental exposure
- Medical history including linking of records
across services - Concurrent medical records
- Research records
- Bioinformatics data linkage
- Complex data comparisons make vast array of data
useable for analysis, research - Comparisons among data sets, samples
- Tracking across time, groups
- Biobanks may be
- Retrospective
- Prospective
- Both
17- Prospective Biobank
- UK Biobank www.ukbiobank.ac.uk
- Recruiting adult volunteers to donate samples and
consent to future use, recontacted into future,
no personal feedback - UK Biobank will gather, store and protect a
vast bank of medical data and material that will
allow researchers to study in depth, in decades
to come, how the complex interplay of genes,
lifestyle and environment affects our risk of
disease. It is the first time that such a
project has been attempted in such fine detail on
such a vast scale - Retrospective Menzies Research Centre, Tasmania
- Clusters of families with genetic conditions,
extensive family tree based on public record
and connected with pathology samples, genetic
pedigree retrospective--gtprospective
18Why link deliberative democracy and biobanks?
- Public health system-- public good
- Records/ samples
- Citizens reliance on state to protect/control
access to health information - Social interest in responsible use of health
data/ development of evidence based health
policy - Individual and collective impact of use/misuse
- Access to resources and profits
- Biobanks as re-shaping the scope of the public
and nature of public goods
19Potential concerns and possibilities in the
governance of Biobanks
-
- Public trust (Stranger et al 2005)/ Public Gene
Angst (Bovenberg 2005) - Citizens value medical research, fear risk of
loss of privacy, control discrimination - Confidence, trust in institutions charged with
protecting use of information - Relational approach to consent (Lippworth el al
2006) - Community involvement in deciding research
priorities, administration of banks - Benefit sharing/ commodification (Dickenson 2004)
- Questioning assumption that research benefits
will be shared equitably - Exploring the implications of human genetic
information, tissues, cell lines becoming market
commodities - Creation of biocapital (Sunder Rajan, 2006)
- Recognition of the symbiotic development of
technological capacity and markets for
biotechnology - Public participation in shaping policy (Stranger
et al 2005) / ethicality (Scott et al 2005) - Citizen participation as developing confidence in
the process - Community input in articulating the symbolic and
cultural significance of policy/practice
20Deliberation and the governance of biobanks
- Deliberative democratic approach policy based on
argument and reason citizens able to participate
in the deliberation - Expert input is important, but contestable and
not definitive - Regulators can draw on actual rather than
presumed public responses - Hard decisions are open to argument
- Citizens provide direct input
- Regulators, oversight bodies need to be
responsive to deliberative input
21Big-Picture Bioethics Policy-Making and Liberal
Democracy
- For further information
- ARC Discovery Project Big Picture Bioethics
website - www.uow.edu.au/arts/research/bigpicturebioethics
- sdodds_at_uow.edu.au