Opening conference | Participation in Long-Term Decision-Making

Time: 1516 February 2018

Venue: University of Turku (Educarium), lecture hall EDU3 (Address: Assistentinkatu 5)

The conference examines the problem of ‘short-termism’ in public decision-making and governance.


Keynote lectures & materials


Prof. Claudia Landwehr (University of Mainz):

Hearing silent voices. How democracies can make statistical victims count?

Abstract: Some groups are more likely to be given voice and to be heard in politics than others. I present a typology of groups that are systematically underrepresented and direct attention one of them: statistical victims, i.e. unidentified persons who in the future will suffer or even die as a result of political decisions not to allocate resources to their needs. Statistical victims are by definition silent and I argue that their morally significant and legitimate interests cannot be adequately considered where politics is driven by electoral pressures. Hence, their representation can only be discursive and has to be ensured in extra-majoritarian forums. However, the legitimacy of such non-elected bodies is always precarious in a democracy. I discuss the procedural and empirical legitimacy of a hypothetical “Council for Statistical Victims” and come to the conclusion that while a mandate for a respective body is desirable from a perspective of justice and democratic performance, it can only be legitimated as the result of democratic institutional design.

Claudia Landwehr is a professor of public policy at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. Her work focusses on the evolution of democratic institutions and the distributional consequences of institutional design. Before joining the faculty in Mainz, she was a Schumpeter Fellow at the Goethe University Frankfurt, a visiting scholar at Harvard University and the Australian National University, and a junior research fellow at the University of Hamburg, where she obtained her doctoral degree in 2007. She is author of the book Political Conflict and Political Preferences: Communicative Action Between Facts, Norms and Interests and has published articles in The Journal of Political Philosophy, Governance, the European Journal of Political Research and numerous other journals. Her most recent publications deal with challenges of strategic institutional design (Government & Opposition 2016), citizens’ conflicting normative conceptions of democracy (Political Studies, forthcoming) and the necessity of preserving the procedural consensus through democratic metadeliberation (Political Studies 2015).

 


Prof. Mark Warren (University of British Columbia):

Three challenges for long-term decision-making in democracies: Boundaries, knowledge, and incentives

Abstract: What kinds of challenges do long-term issues such as climate change pose for democratic political systems? First, there is a boundary problem: How can we include in the demos people who are not yet born? Second, even if we can find ways include future generations, how can we know what their interests might be? And third, even if we could solve these problems, what incentives do those of us who are living now have to consider the interests of those with no voice and no power? We can use recent democratic theory to clarify these challenges. With respect to boundaries, we should be using the all affected interests principle of inclusion. With respect to knowledge of future interests, we should think about maintaining conditions of choice for future generations. With respect to incentives, we need political structures that translate our natural historicity into collective decisions: few people want to leave a world to their children and grandchildren that is worse than the ones they inherited.

Mark E. Warren holds the Harold and Dorrie Merilees Chair for the Study of Democracy at the University of British Columbia. He is especially interested in democratic innovations, civil society and democratic governance, and political corruption. He is currently working with an international team on a project entitled Participedia (www.participedia.net), which uses a web-based platform to collect data about democratic innovation and participatory governance around the world.

Presentation (pdf)

 

Prof. Arild Vatn (Norwegian University of Life Sciences):
Value articulating institutions: The challenge of long-term democratic decision-making in environmental governance.

Abstract: The talk will explain the concept of value articulating institutions (VAIs) and discuss how long term – typically intergenerational interests – can be included in decision-making over environmental values through structuring such institutions. VAIs can be seen as defined by three main characteristics: a) who participates and in what capacity; b) the format of data, its production and evaluation; c) the process of value articulation and priority making. Various VAIs – e.g., cost-benefit analysis and various deliberative institutions – are based on different assumptions regarding rationality (individual vs. social), human interaction (instrumental vs. communicative) and participation (direct or via representation). They moreover have different demands on data and value articulation with implications for how the issues involved – e.g., environmental stakes – can be treated and conclusions made. The talk will clarify these issues comparing formats of VAIs. Having elucidated key institutional issues regarding value articulation more in general, I will look especially at the issue of long-term democratic decision-making – especially the issue of representing future generations. Here I will discuss three questions: How are future generations represented in different VAIs? On what basis could we qualify what is legitimate representation? How does the format of VAIs influence the content of the representation of future generations?

Arild Vatn is professor at the Department of International Environment and Development Studies at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU). His main expertise is in institut-ional and ecological economics. Specific fields of experience are: a) Environmental governance and policy processes; b) Policy evaluations regarding issues like climate, biodiversity, forestry and agriculture; c) Environmental valuation. Vatn has been president and vice president of the European Society of Ecological Economics. He was awarded the NMBU research prize in 2002, the joint EAEPE and AFEE Veblen 150 prize in 2007 for his book ‘Institutions and the Environment’, and the ISEE Kenneth Boulding Award for 2016.

Presentation (pdf)

ORGANIZER

PALO – Participation in Long-Term Decision Making is a multidisciplinary research project that analyzes problems of practices of long-term decision-making. With the objective to strengthen democracy, PALO develops better practices for deliberative citizen participation. The consortium partners are University of Turku, Åbo Akademi University, Natural Resources Institute Finland and University of Tampere.

The project is funded by the Strategic Research Council (SRC) at the Academy of Finland. SRC provides funding to long-term and programme-based research aimed at finding solutions to the major challenges facing Finnish society.

 

PROGRAMME

Conference poster (pdf)
Conference programme (pdf)


* * *

Thursday 15 February (Edu3 lecture hall, Educarium building, University of Turku)

9.00 Registration

9.20 Opening words: Rector Kalervo Väänänen (University of Turku)

9.30 Keynote I: Prof. Claudia Landwehr (University of Mainz):

Hearing silent voices. How democracies can make statistical victims count?

10.45 Coffee

11.00 Keynote II: Prof. Mark Warren (University of British Columbia): Three challenges for long-term decision-making in democracies: Boundaries, knowledge, and incentives

12.15 Lunch

13.15 Workshop WP1: Foundations of long-term decision-making

Simo Kyllönen: Towards an intergenerational justification of democracy

Olli Lappalainen: Network structure and opinion formation: An experiment

Kaisa Herne: Asymmetric resource allocation: The role of the veil of ignorance and empathy

15.00 Coffee

15.30–17.15 Workshop WP2: Problems in present patterns of long-term decision-making

Lauri Rapeli: Explaining variations in citizens’ political time horizons

Marina Lindell: Policy preferences and time discounting over the life span

Juha Ylisalo: Managing the budgetary commons at the local level:

What affects the time perspective of decision making in Finnish municipalities?

 

Friday 16 February (Edu3 lecture hall, Educarium building, University of Turku)

9.15 Keynote III: Prof. Arild Vatn (Norwegian University of Life Sciences): Value articulating institutions: The challenge of long-term democratic decision-making in environmental governance

10.30 Coffee

10.45 Workshop WP3: Activating citizens in long-term decision-making

Michael MacKenzie: Future publics: The (democratic) politics of

intergenerational relations

Staffan Himmelroos: Citizen deliberation and long-term decision making: Designing a deliberative experiment

Maija Jäske: Citizens’ jury on referendum options: Improving voter knowledge through democratic deliberation

12.15 Lunch

13.15 Workshop WP4: Instruments for long-term environmental governance

Juha Hiedanpää: Reasons and reasoning in regional land use planning

Eija Pouta: Community-based deliberative valuation of cultural ecosystem services

14.45 Coffee

15.00–16.00 Panel discussion: Reflections on PALO’s plans (SAB members)

 

* * *

 

Workshop | Democratic institutions and future generations

Time: Thursday 10th May, 10.45-17.30
Venue: Centre for the Study of Democracy, University of Westminster, London

There is growing recognition that democracies tend to privilege the short-term to the detriment of the interests of future generations. This workshop focuses on theoretical and practical developments that aim to ameliorate the drivers of short-termism and orientate democratic institutions to the protection of future generations.

The workshop will be based on five papers:

• Simon Caney (Warwick), ‘Democracy and the Future: Exploring Some Mechanisms for Addressing Wrongful Short-Termism’

• Henrike Knappe (Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, Potsdam), ‘Whose Future? Political Representation in Transnational Sustainability Politics’

• Michael Mackenzie (Pittsburgh), ‘Acting Through Time: Collective Action Among Non-Overlapping Generations’

• Maija Setälä (Turku) ‘The Politics of Non-Existence. The Representation of Future Generations in Democratic Deliberation’

• Graham Smith (Westminster), ‘What Role Participatory Governance in the Protection of Future Generations?’

There will be an assumption that participants will have read the papers beforehand. Please contact Professor Graham Smith g.smith(at)westminster.ac.uk if you would like to participate in the workshop and receive copies of the papers.

The workshop is co-convened by the Centre for the Study of Democracy (CSD), the Participation in Long-Term Decision-Making (PALO) project and the Foundation for Democracy and Sustainable Development (FDSD).

Workshop poster (pdf)

 

Deliberative democracy summer school | Implementing citizen deliberation as a democratic practice

PALO is involved in the organisation of The third deliberative democracy summer school in Turku/Åbo, 2729 June 2018.


Programme

Tuesday 26 June

15:00 – 17:00 Registration

 

Wednesday 27 June

Theme of the day: Citizen Deliberation and Representative Democracy

09:00 – 09:30 Registration and coffee

09:30 – 11:00 Keynote I: David Farrell (University College Dublin): “The Irish experience of mixing representative and deliberative democracy”

11:15 – 12:45 Paper session I

12:45 – 14:00 Lunch

14:00 – 15:30 Paper session II

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee

16:00 – 17:00 Methods session I: Kaisa Herne (University of Tampere): “Experiments”

 

Thursday 28 June

Theme of the day: Citizen Deliberation and Direct Democracy

09:30 – 11:00 Keynote II: John Gastil (Penn State University): “How to make direct democracy more deliberative”

11:00 – 11:20 Coffee

11:20 – 12:50 Paper session III

12:50 – 14:00 Lunch

14:00 – 15:30 Paper session IV

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee

16:00 – 17:00 Methods session II: Peter Söderlund (Åbo Akademi University): “Case studies”

19:30 Summer School dinner

 

Friday 29 June

Theme of the day: Models for the Future

10:00 – 11:30 Keynote III: John Dryzek (University of Canberra): “Directions in deliberative theory and practice”

11:30 – 11:50 Coffee

11:50 – 13:20 Paper session V

13:20 – 14:30 Lunch

14:30 – 15:30 Roundtable: “Reflections on the summer school”

 

The venue for the summer school will be Axelia II -building at Åbo Akademi University. Address: Piispankatu 8. Turku Finland.

 

Registrations and further information: Mikko Leino molein(at)utu.fi

More information can be found here.

Workshop | Behavioural and experimental perspectives to environmental valuation and governance

Time: 30–31 May 2018
Venue: Maaherran makasiini building, Porthan hall (address: Henrikinkatu 10), Turku Finland

The workshop will explore the interface of experimental behavioural sciences and experiential landscape valuation studies. We will focus our attention and share experiences on behavioural laboratory experiments, choice experiment surveys and deliberative economic valuation approaches. Our purpose is to open new theoretical and empirical possibilities for the real-life field experiments on collaborative and deliberative environmental valuation.


Programme

Wednesday 30 May 2018

10:00 Introduction to landscape valuation

Windmills, shield forests and the public: landscape valuation as community-building
Juha Hiedanpää, Natural Resources Institute Finland, Luke

Environmental valuation in the framework of payments for ecosystem services
Erkki Mäntymaa, Natural Resources Institute Finland, Luke

Deliberative environmental valuation
Eija Pouta, Natural Resources Institute Finland, Luke

Topical discussion

11:30 Coffee

11:45 Keynote I: Deliberative monetary valuation
Jasper Kenter, University of York (Online presentation)

12:30 Keynote II: Subliminal influence on generosity
Topi Miettinen, University of Helsinki

13:15 Lunch (M Kitchen & Café, Aboa Vetus, Itäinen Rantakatu 4-6)

14:30 Behavioral laboratory experiments

Empathy priming and asymmetric allocation decisions: an experimental design
Kaisa Herne, University of Tampere

Opinion formation in structured groups of experimental subjects
Olli Lappalainen, University of Tampere

Topical discussion

15:40 Coffee

16:0017:30 Structured discussion: possible field experiments in PALO

19:00 Get-together reception (Natural Resources Institute Finland, Luke, Itäinen Pitkäkatu 4a)

Thursday 31 May 2018

10:00 Keynote III: Field experiments in environmental governance studies:
a meta approach
Ulan Kasymov, Humboldt University, Berlin

10:45 Keynote IV: Participatory environmental valuation: some challenges
John O’Neill, University of Manchester

11:30–11.45     Closing remarks
Juha Hiedanpää, Natural Resources Institute Finland, Luke

* * *

13:0016:00     Interaction workshop for PALO researchers

* * *

Registration: The registration for this workshop is closed.

Further information:
Please direct questions about the event to Juha Hiedanpää Juha.Hiedanpaa(at)luke.fi.

Organiser:  PALO – Participation in Long-Term Decision Making is a multidisciplinary research project that analyzes problems of practices of long-term decision-making. With the objective to strengthen democracy, PALO develops better practices for deliberative citizen participation. The consortium partners are University of Turku, Åbo Akademi University, Natural Resources Institute Finland and University of Tampere. The project is funded by the Strategic Research Council (SRC) at the Academy of Finland.

 

Workshop poster (pdf)

Workshop programme (pdf)

 

Workshop | Intergenerational Justice and Democracy

Time: September 5-6, 2018

Venue: University of Tampere, Pinni B3107 (address: Kanslerinrinne 1)

The themes of the workshop concerned intergenerational justice and democratic decision making from a philosophical perspective. Keynote speakers included Simon Caney, Kai Spikermann, Eerik Lagerspetz, Michael MacKenzie and Eva Erman.


Read more about the workshop here (in Finnish).


Video recordings:

Day 1 (video)
Password: palows18
Simon Caney’s presentation starts at 0:00:05 | Kai Spiekermann 1:42:00 | Eerik Lagerspetz 3:05:00 | Teea Kortetmäki 4:10:00 | Simo Kyllönen 5:34:00.

Day 2 (video)
Password: palows18
Eva Erman’s presentation starts at 0:01:00 | Michael MacKenzie 1:43:30 | Säde Hormio 2:59:30 | Markku Oksanen 3:57:30.

 

Program

Wednesday 5 September 2018

10.00 Opening

10.00–11.15 Simon Caney, University of Warwick, “Democratic theory, intergenerational justice and overcoming short-termism in decision-making”
Discussant: Arto Laitinen, University of Tampere’

11.15–11.45 Coffee break

11.45–13.00 Kai Spiekermann, London School of Economics, “Irreversible losses”
Discussant: Antti Kauppinen, University of Helsinki

13.00–14.00 Lunch

14.00–15.15 Eerik Lagerspetz, University of Turku, ”The all-affected principle: A critique”
Discussant: Teemu Toppinen, University of Helsinki

15.15–16.15 Teea Kortetmäki, University of Tampere, “Convergent visions in a divergent world? Long-term policy paths and pragmatism”
Discussant: Jaakko Kuosmanen, Demos Helsinki

16.15–16.45 Coffee break

16.45–17.45 Simo Kyllönen, University of Helsinki, ”Democratic ways of promoting intergenerational justice”
Discussant:  Milla Vaha, University of Turku

 

Thursday 6 September 2018

09.30–10.45 Eva Erman, University of Stockholm, “A function-sensitive approach to the political legitimacy of global governance”
Discussant: Henri Vogt, University of Turku

10.45–11.15 Coffee break

11.15 –12.30 Michael MacKenzie, University of Pittsburgh, “Beyond theories of intergenerational justice: The politics of intergenerational relations”
Discussant: Maija Setälä, University of Turku

12.30–13.45 Lunch

13.45–14.45 Säde Hormio, University of Helsinki, “Advocating on behalf of future generations: Juliana v. U.S.”
Discussant: Heta Heiskanen, University of Tampere

14.45–15.45 Markku Oksanen, University of Eastern Finland, “Environmental human rights and long-term decision-making”
Discussant: Johanna Ahola-Launonen, University of Helsinki


Registration
The registration for this workshop is closed.

 

Organizer
PALO – Participation in Long-Term Decision Making is a multidisciplinary research project that analyzes problems of practices of long-term decision-making. With the objective to strengthen democracy, PALO develops better practices for deliberative citizen participation. The consortium partners are University of Turku, Åbo Akademi University, Natural Resources Institute Finland and University of Tampere. The project is funded by the Strategic Research Council (SRC) at the Academy of Finland.

Further information
Please direct questions about the event to Kaisa Herne at kaisa.herne(at)uta.fi.

 

Workshop program (pdf)

Workshop poster (pdf)