1 / 14

BIOPRODUCT REGULATION: AN ANALYSIS OF GOVERNANCE COMPLEXITY

BIOPRODUCT REGULATION: AN ANALYSIS OF GOVERNANCE COMPLEXITY. Lisa F. Clark, VALGEN Postdoctoral Fellow Johnson- Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy University of Saskatchewan, Canada Peter W.B. Phillips, VALGEN Co-Lead and Professor Johnson- Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy

peigi
Download Presentation

BIOPRODUCT REGULATION: AN ANALYSIS OF GOVERNANCE COMPLEXITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BIOPRODUCT REGULATION: AN ANALYSIS OF GOVERNANCE COMPLEXITY Lisa F. Clark, VALGEN Postdoctoral Fellow Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy University of Saskatchewan, Canada Peter W.B. Phillips, VALGEN Co-Lead and Professor Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy University of Saskatchewan, Canada

  2. ‘Science-based’ decision making • Regulatory systems for innovative technologies put a significant emphasis on scientific evidence in decision-making • These systems are assumed to produce efficient and rational outcomes because science is usually deemed to be norm and value free • Formal decision-making systems are often visually represented like this… Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  3. Regulatory pathway for Plants with Novel Traits (PNTs) Sources: Compiled by VALGEN research team from Bean, 2011 and CFIA/PBO, 2008. Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  4. ‘Evidence-based’ decision making • ‘Non-science’ forms of evidence are parts of the management of bioproducts and crops • Normative understandings of acceptable levels of exposure to risk (not typically captured in decision-making flow charts), have serious implications for decision-making • In reality, decision-making systems look like this… Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  5. Regulatory pathway for PNTs (including ‘optional’ steps) Source: Compiled by VALGEN research team Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  6. Complexity and Decomposability • Simon (1962): convoluted and often invisible exchanges/transactions between sub-system components can be revealed by decomposing the system • Revealing unseen information transactions show factors that impact behaviour of the system that may not be apparent in official decision-making procedures • Can use the idea of complexity to observe points within decision-making systems that may contribute to unanticipated outcomes Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  7. Operationalizing Complexity • Social Networking Analysis (SNA) • Social power derived from interconnectedness • Actor interactions within governance frameworks • Kurtosis Analysis • Statistical test measures the distribution of a random variable in relation to the mean of a ‘Normal’ distribution curve (the ‘bell’ curve) • Identifies patterns of input and output distributions Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  8. Case study: Canadian regulatory system for Plants with Novel Traits (PNTs) • SNA • policy (Directives, Acts) • regulator interviews (CFIA, PBO, AAFC) • department/agency websites • PNT Decision Documents • Kurtosis Analysis • PNT field trials (inputs) • PNT approvals (outputs) Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  9. SNA Matrix of Maximum Interactions 1= unidirectional (A=sent; B= received) 2= bidirectional unclear Source: Compiled by VALGEN research team Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  10. SNA of Canadian PNT approval process (max. interactions) Source: Calculated by VALGEN research team using ORA software Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  11. Number of Plants with Novel Traits (PNT) Field Trials and Approvals in Canada (1988-2010) Source: Compiled by VALGEN research team Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  12. Average proportion of total field trials 1988-2010 Average proportion of total approvals 1995-2010 Source: Calculated by VALGEN research team using STATA Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  13. Conclusions • Beta test results indicate complexity may be present in Canadian regulatory system • SNA indicates those who don’t hold official power could still exert influence on outcomes • Kurtosis analysis indicates lack of predicted pattern in outputs • Both SNA and kurtosis analysis require detailed information of interactions and system processes to have a high degree of confidence in results • Methodology is applicable to other regulatory systems for bioproducts and crops Bioproduct Regulation: An Analysis of Governance Complexity

  14. Jaime Leonard, Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, MA Candidate University of Saskatchewan NyankomoMarwa, Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, PhD Candidate University of Saskatchewan Camille D. Ryan, Professional Research Associate Departments of Plant Sciences & Bioresource Policy, University of Saskatchewan Kari Doerksen, VALGEN Senior Project Manager

More Related