Scenario planning as communicative action: Lessons from participatory exercises conducted for the Scottish livestock industry

Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Based on Habermas' Theory of Communicative Action, this paper critiques the transparency and legitimacy of participatory scenario planning, considering a case study of scenario development for the livestock industry within Scotland. The paper considers the extent to which the case study approximates the conditions for 'ideal speech situations', and how these conditions could be applied more widely in participatory scenario planning. The authors explore the rationale for participatory scenario planning within the science-policy interface with critical reference to the corporate context in which scenario planning has evolved. The aim is to optimise the potential for its use in the context of socio-technical and environmental governance. Researcher co-reflections on the case study are mapped within a matrix of indices representing conditions for ideal speech situations. Further analytical categories highlight the extent to which ideal speech was approximated. Although many of the constraints on achieving ideal speech situations reflect the practical logistics of organising participatory exercises, and will continue to represent significant challenges, our novel approach enables the systematic identification of these important issues and a conceptual framework for understanding how they interrelate that may prove useful to practitioners and theorists alike.
Year
2017
Category
Refereed journal
Output Tags
Theme 2: Productive and Sustainable Land Management and Rural Economies (RESAS 2
WP 2.2 Livestock production, health, welfare and disease control (RESAS 2016-21)
EPIC
RD 2.2.6 Animal disease epidemiology (RESAS 2016-21)