Broadening Citizen Inclusion in Technology Policy Related to ...
Abstract
This paper examines citizen involvement in forming technology policy related to emerging ubiquitous network societies. The complexity of modern life has created a heightened awareness of risks created through the advance of modern technologies, as well as a deeper awareness of the limitations of expert knowledge (Beck, 1992; Giddens, 1990). While technologies such as the World Wide Web, social media, and mobile telephony have the potential to transform democratic discourse and increase feedback into the policy-making process, indications are that, overall, it has not been greatly enriched. Citizens often feel disconnected from the policy-making process and are overwhelmed by rapid and ongoing scientific and technical advances. In particular, this paper addresses college-level education designed to challenge students to become more engaged in shaping these emerging systems and describes an approach using social informatics as a conceptual framework and alternative futures scenario building as part of a redesigned curriculum in information and communication technology (ICT) and policy courses in the School of Communications at University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa.