The precautionary principle (PP) is fundamentally a claim that acting to avoid and/or mitigate threats of serious harm should be accorded high priority in public policy. Over the last three decades, governments and international bodies have endorsed it in principle, and some of them have incorporated it into some areas of policy practice. Yet, PP is controversial in policy circles, public discussion and scholarly discourse. Here the PP literature is reviewed from the perspective of economics, where the tendency is to see theory and methods for rational decision-making under risk and uncertainty as well-established and risk management tools as well developed, and to view the PP with some circumspection. Following a brief introduction to PP concepts, history, applications, and controversies, I review and critique the standard economic approach to decision-making and risk management (here labeled ordinary risk management, ORM), identifying areas of incompleteness especially in the treatment of disproportionate and asymmetric threats. After reviewing some of the more prominent PP controversies in the scholarly literature, I suggest a conceptual framework for a PP that may withstand the major criticisms levied against the PP and make a unique and valid contribution to a decision and risk management arsenal that includes ORM. The framework relates the nature of the threat, the evidence, and the remedy indicated; and each of these elements is discussed in some detail. The scope of this PP is identified in general terms and distinguished from the quantity restrictions and regulatory safety margins that often serve as practical heuristics when ORM-based policies are implemented. Because the PP is clearly identified as a principle, I discuss the role of principles in policy design and implementation, and conclude with some suggestions as to how this PP could guide policy and management.
We Already Have Risk Management — Do We Really Need the Precautionary Principle? Available to Purchase
I am grateful to Emery Castle, Henk Folmer, Eric Naevdal, Tom Tietenberg, and two reviewers for comments on a previous draft, and to correspondents and seminar participants too numerous to mention for helpful suggestions along the way. This project began to take shape while I was in residence at the Rockefeller Study and Conference Center, Bellagio, Italy, in spring 2008. This article is a contribution tomulti-state projectW-2133, which receives financial support from USDA/CSREES and the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center. The ideas summarized here are developed more completely in my forthcoming book, Risk and Precaution (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
Randall A (2009), "We Already Have Risk Management — Do We Really Need the Precautionary Principle?". International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics, Vol. 3 No. 1 pp. 39–74, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/101.00000022
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