风险、死亡和伤害:风险监管的规范基础

M. Adler
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引用次数: 18

摘要

死亡是一种伤害吗?死亡的风险是一种伤害吗?这些问题是风险监管的基础。监管人类生命威胁的机构,如EPA、OSHA、FDA、CPSC或NHTSA,无一例外地认为过早死亡是一种第一方伤害——对死者的福利是一种挫折——并且经常认为死亡的风险是一种独特的、额外的第一方伤害。如果这些假设是不正确的,那么管理风险活动的无数法规和法规应该从根本上进行彻底改革,因为防止过早死亡和过早死亡风险的第三方利益往往太小,不足以证明这些法律造成的巨大合规成本是合理的。在这篇文章中,我将以一种哲学上严谨的方式来思考死亡的危害,以及死亡的风险。这种分析是复杂的,因为人们提出了各种似是而非的福利理论,而且风险也是一个多面的概念。一个给定的人P的死亡“风险”可能是贝叶斯意义上的风险(某人P死亡的主观概率),也可能是频率意义上的风险(像P这样的人因P所面临的威胁而过早死亡的客观频率)。这两种风险概念非常不同,但在关于风险的法律或政策分析写作中往往没有加以区分。至于死亡的危害:这引发了一些棘手的哲学问题,这些问题促使一些当代哲学家否认,垂死之人的情况比她继续活着的情况更糟。我最终得出的结论是,死亡是第一人称福利的挫折——我认为,常识在这里是正确的——贝叶斯意义上的风险也是如此,但频率论意义上的风险不是。这一结论对一系列监管做法有影响,特别是对成本效益分析、风险风险分析、对制定健康或安全阈值的法规的解释、环境司法政策和比较风险分析,以及对侵权法和刑法也有影响。这些含义将在文章的最后一节详细探讨。特别是:广泛使用频率主义风险指标作为监管选择的决定因素是错误的。EPA, OSHA, FDA和其他联邦和州机构通常通过观察(至少部分地)毒素对最大暴露,高度暴露或具有代表性的个体施加的频率风险来确定如何严格监管某些毒素。同样,环境正义分析也常常与频率风险的分布密切相关。一些人建议,监管优先级的设定(所谓的比较风险评估)也要考虑频率风险。最高法院在“苯”一案(工业联盟部门诉美国石油协会,1980年)中作出的开创性裁决鼓励了对频率风险的监管,并得到了风险评估界的认可。但这种做法没有规范依据,应予以摒弃。同样,在频繁主义的意义上,强加风险既不应该是侵权的,也不应该是犯罪的——至少如果在这些领域中,损害是责任的先决条件,情况很可能是这样。
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Risk, Death and Harm: The Normative Foundations of Risk Regulation
Is death a harm? Is the risk of death a harm? These questions lie at the foundations of risk regulation. Agencies that regulate threats to human life, such as the EPA, OSHA, the FDA, the CPSC, or NHTSA, invariably assume that premature death is a first-party harm - a welfare setback to the person who dies - and often assume that being at risk of death is a distinct and additional first-party harm. If these assumptions are untrue, the myriad statutes and regulations that govern risky activities should be radically overhauled, since the third-party benefits of preventing premature death and the risk of premature death are often too small to justify the large compliance costs that these laws create. In this Article, I consider the harmfulness of death, and of the risk of death, in a philosophically rigorous way. The analysis is complicated, since a variety of plausible theories of welfare have been proposed, and since risk too is a multifaceted concept. A given person P's "risk" of death might be risk in a Bayesian sense (some person's subjective probability that P will die), or risk in the frequentist sense (the objective frequency with which persons like P die prematurely as a result of the kind of threat to which P is exposed). These two conceptions of risk are very different, yet too often are not distinguished in legal or policy-analytic writing about risk. As for the harmfulness of death: this raises knotty philosophical problems, problems that have prompted some contemporary philosophers to deny that the dying person is worse off than she would have been had she continued to live. I ultimately conclude that death is a first-person welfare setback - common sense is vindicated here, I argue - as is risk in the Bayesian sense, but that risk in the frequentist sense is not. This conclusion has implications for a range of regulatory practices - specifically, for cost-benefit analysis, risk-risk analysis, the interpretation of statutes that create health or safety thresholds, environmental justice policy, and comparative risk analysis - and also for tort and criminal law. These implications are explored, at length, in the final section of the Article. In particular: the widespread use of frequentist risk measures as a determinant of regulatory choice is misguided. EPA, OSHA, FDA and other federal and state agencies typically determine how stringently to regulate some toxin by looking (at least in part) to the frequentist risk imposed by the toxin on the maximally exposed, highly exposed, or representative individual. Similarly, environmental justice analysis is often keyed to the distribution of frequentist risks. And some propose that regulatory priority-setting (so-called comparative risk assessment) also take into consideration frequentist risk. This regulatory focus on frequentist risk was encouraged by the Supreme Court's seminal decision in the "Benzene" case (Industrial Union Dept v. American Petroleum Institute, 1980), and is endorsed by the risk assessment community. But the practice has no normative basis, and should be abandoned. Similarly, risk-imposition in the frequentist sense should be neither tortious nor criminal - at least if harmfulness is a precondition for liability in these domains, as it may well be.
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