储蓄Governance-By-Design

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW California Law Review Pub Date : 2018-05-07 DOI:10.15779/Z38QN5ZB5H
D. Mulligan, K. Bamberger
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But it has failed to come to terms with the reality that \"governance-by-design\"-the purposeful effort to use technology to embed values-is becoming a central mode of policymaking, and that our existing regulatory system is fundamentally ill-equipped to prevent that phenomenon from subverting public governance. Far from being a panacea, governance-by-design has undermined important governance norms and chipped away at our voting, speech, privacy, and equality rights. In administrative agencies, courts, Congress, and international policy bodies, public discussions about embedding values in design arise in a one-off, haphazard way, if at all. Constrained by their structural limitations, these traditional venues rarely explore the full range of other values that design might affect, and often advance, a single value or occasionally pit one value against another. They seldom permit a meta-discussion about when and whether it is appropriate to enlist technology in the service of values at all. And their policy discussions almost never include designers, engineers, and those that study the impact of socio-technical systems on values. When technology is designed to regulate without such discussions-as it often is-the effects can be even more insidious. The resulting technology often hides government and corporate aims and the fundamental political decisions that have been made. In this way, governance-by-design obscures policy choices altogether. Such choices recede from the political as they become what \"is\" rather than what politics has determined ought to be. This Article proposes a detailed framework for saving governance-by-design. Through four case studies, the Article examines a range of recent battles over the values embedded in technology design and makes the case that we are entering an era of policymaking by \"design war.\" These four battles, in turn, highlight four recurring dysfunctions of governance-by-design: First, governance-by-design overreaches by using overbroad technological fixes that lack the flexibility to balance equities and adapt to changing circumstances. Errors and unintended consequences result. Second, governance-by-design often privileges one or a few values while excluding other important ones, particularly broad human rights. Third, regulators lack the proper tools for governance-by-design. Administrative agencies, legislatures, and courts often lack technical expertise and have traditional structures and accountability mechanisms that poorly fit the job of regulating technology. Fourth, governance-by-design decisions that broadly affect the public are often made in private venues or in processes that make technological choices appear inevitable and apolitical. If we fail to develop new rules of engagement for governance-by-design, substantial and consequential policy choices will be made without effective public participation, purposeful debate, and relevant expertise. Important values will be sacrificed-sometimes inadvertently, because of bad decisions, and sometimes willfully, because decisions will be captured by powerful stakeholders. To address these critical issues, this Article proposes four rules of engagement. It constructs a framework to help decision makers protect values and democratic processes as they consider regulating by technology. Informed by the examination of skirmishes across the battlefields, as well as relevant Science and Technology Studies (STS), legal, design, and engineering literatures, this framework embraces four overarching imperatives: 1. Design with Modesty and Restraint to Preserve Flexibility 2. Privilege Human and Public Rights 3. Ensure Regulators Possess the Right Tools: Broad Authority and Competence, and Technical Expertise 4. Maintain the Publicness of Policymaking These rules of engagement offer a way toward surfacing and resolving value disputes in technological design, while preserving rather than subverting public governance and public values.","PeriodicalId":51452,"journal":{"name":"California Law Review","volume":"106 1","pages":"697-784"},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2018-05-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"27","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Saving Governance-By-Design\",\"authors\":\"D. 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They seldom permit a meta-discussion about when and whether it is appropriate to enlist technology in the service of values at all. And their policy discussions almost never include designers, engineers, and those that study the impact of socio-technical systems on values. When technology is designed to regulate without such discussions-as it often is-the effects can be even more insidious. The resulting technology often hides government and corporate aims and the fundamental political decisions that have been made. In this way, governance-by-design obscures policy choices altogether. Such choices recede from the political as they become what \\\"is\\\" rather than what politics has determined ought to be. This Article proposes a detailed framework for saving governance-by-design. 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引用次数: 27

摘要

作者:Mulligan,丹麦;Bamberger,KA |摘要:©版权所有2018 California Law Review。事实证明,通过技术进行治理具有不可抗拒的诱惑力。从互联网主干到消费设备,一切都采用技术设计,通过促进隐私、安全、知识产权保护、创新和言论自由等价值观,有目的地规范行为。法律和政策学者讨论了关于技术选择的政治影响的个人冲突,从情报和警察机构是否可以获得私人加密数据到关于数字权利管理的辩论。但它未能接受这样一个现实,即“设计治理”——即有目的地利用技术嵌入价值观的努力——正在成为决策的核心模式,而我们现有的监管体系根本没有能力防止这种现象颠覆公共治理。设计治理远非灵丹妙药,它破坏了重要的治理规范,削弱了我们的投票权、言论权、隐私权和平等权利。在行政机构、法院、国会和国际政策机构中,关于在设计中嵌入价值观的公开讨论是一次性的、随意的,如果有的话。受结构限制,这些传统场馆很少探索设计可能影响的所有其他价值观,而且往往会推进单一价值观,或者偶尔会将一种价值观与另一种价值相比较。他们很少允许就何时以及是否适合利用技术为价值观服务进行元讨论。他们的政策讨论几乎从不包括设计师、工程师和那些研究社会技术系统对价值观影响的人。当技术被设计为在没有这种讨论的情况下进行监管时,其影响可能会更加隐蔽。由此产生的技术往往掩盖了政府和企业的目标以及已经做出的基本政治决策。通过这种方式,设计治理完全掩盖了政策选择。这样的选择从政治上退了出来,因为它们变成了“是”,而不是政治决定的应该是什么。这篇文章提出了一个详细的设计拯救治理的框架。通过四个案例研究,本文考察了最近围绕技术设计价值观的一系列斗争,并证明我们正在进入一个“设计战争”的决策时代。这四场斗争反过来又突出了设计治理的四个反复出现的功能障碍:首先,设计治理过度使用了过度的技术修复,缺乏平衡股权和适应不断变化的环境的灵活性。会导致错误和意外后果。第二,蓄意治理往往使一种或几种价值观享有特权,而排斥其他重要价值观,特别是广泛的人权。第三,监管机构缺乏适当的治理工具。行政机构、立法机构和法院往往缺乏技术专业知识,传统的结构和问责机制不适合监管技术。第四,广泛影响公众的设计治理决策通常是在私人场所或使技术选择显得不可避免且非政治性的过程中做出的。如果我们不能通过设计制定新的参与治理规则,那么在没有有效的公众参与、有目的的辩论和相关专业知识的情况下,将做出实质性和重要的政策选择。重要的价值观会被牺牲,有时是因为糟糕的决策,有时是故意的,因为决策会被强大的利益相关者捕获。为了解决这些关键问题,本条提出了四条交战规则。它构建了一个框架,帮助决策者在考虑通过技术进行监管时保护价值观和民主进程。通过对战场上小规模冲突的研究,以及相关的科学技术研究(STS)、法律、设计和工程文献,该框架包含四个首要任务:1。适度克制设计,保持灵活性2。特权人权和公共权利3。确保监管机构拥有正确的工具:广泛的权力和能力,以及技术专长4。保持政策制定的公开性这些参与规则提供了一种在技术设计中出现和解决价值争议的方法,同时维护而不是颠覆公共治理和公共价值观。
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Saving Governance-By-Design
Author(s): Mulligan, DK; Bamberger, KA | Abstract: © Copyright 2018 California Law Review. Governing through technology has proven irresistibly seductive. Everything from the Internet backbone to consumer devices employs technological design to regulate behavior purposefully by promoting values such as privacy, security, intellectual property protection, innovation, and freedom of expression. Legal and policy scholarship has discussed individual skirmishes over the political impact of technical choices-from whether intelligence and police agencies can gain access to privately encrypted data to debates over digital rights management. But it has failed to come to terms with the reality that "governance-by-design"-the purposeful effort to use technology to embed values-is becoming a central mode of policymaking, and that our existing regulatory system is fundamentally ill-equipped to prevent that phenomenon from subverting public governance. Far from being a panacea, governance-by-design has undermined important governance norms and chipped away at our voting, speech, privacy, and equality rights. In administrative agencies, courts, Congress, and international policy bodies, public discussions about embedding values in design arise in a one-off, haphazard way, if at all. Constrained by their structural limitations, these traditional venues rarely explore the full range of other values that design might affect, and often advance, a single value or occasionally pit one value against another. They seldom permit a meta-discussion about when and whether it is appropriate to enlist technology in the service of values at all. And their policy discussions almost never include designers, engineers, and those that study the impact of socio-technical systems on values. When technology is designed to regulate without such discussions-as it often is-the effects can be even more insidious. The resulting technology often hides government and corporate aims and the fundamental political decisions that have been made. In this way, governance-by-design obscures policy choices altogether. Such choices recede from the political as they become what "is" rather than what politics has determined ought to be. This Article proposes a detailed framework for saving governance-by-design. Through four case studies, the Article examines a range of recent battles over the values embedded in technology design and makes the case that we are entering an era of policymaking by "design war." These four battles, in turn, highlight four recurring dysfunctions of governance-by-design: First, governance-by-design overreaches by using overbroad technological fixes that lack the flexibility to balance equities and adapt to changing circumstances. Errors and unintended consequences result. Second, governance-by-design often privileges one or a few values while excluding other important ones, particularly broad human rights. Third, regulators lack the proper tools for governance-by-design. Administrative agencies, legislatures, and courts often lack technical expertise and have traditional structures and accountability mechanisms that poorly fit the job of regulating technology. Fourth, governance-by-design decisions that broadly affect the public are often made in private venues or in processes that make technological choices appear inevitable and apolitical. If we fail to develop new rules of engagement for governance-by-design, substantial and consequential policy choices will be made without effective public participation, purposeful debate, and relevant expertise. Important values will be sacrificed-sometimes inadvertently, because of bad decisions, and sometimes willfully, because decisions will be captured by powerful stakeholders. To address these critical issues, this Article proposes four rules of engagement. It constructs a framework to help decision makers protect values and democratic processes as they consider regulating by technology. Informed by the examination of skirmishes across the battlefields, as well as relevant Science and Technology Studies (STS), legal, design, and engineering literatures, this framework embraces four overarching imperatives: 1. Design with Modesty and Restraint to Preserve Flexibility 2. Privilege Human and Public Rights 3. Ensure Regulators Possess the Right Tools: Broad Authority and Competence, and Technical Expertise 4. Maintain the Publicness of Policymaking These rules of engagement offer a way toward surfacing and resolving value disputes in technological design, while preserving rather than subverting public governance and public values.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: This review essay considers the state of hybrid democracy in California through an examination of three worthy books: Daniel Weintraub, Party of One: Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Rise of the Independent Voter; Center for Governmental Studies, Democracy by Initiative: Shaping California"s Fourth Branch of Government (Second Edition), and Mark Baldassare and Cheryl Katz, The Coming of Age of Direct Democracy: California"s Recall and Beyond. The essay concludes that despite the hoopla about Governor Schwarzenegger as a "party of one" and a new age of "hybrid democracy" in California.
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