The RRI challenge : responsibilization in a state of tension with market regulation / Blagovesta Nikolova.
Material type: TextSeries: Interdisciplinarity, science and humanities series. Innovation and responsibility set ; ; v. 3.Publisher: London, UK : Hoboken, NJ : ISTE, Ltd. ; Wiley, 2019Description: 1 online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781119616146
- 111961614X
- 9781119616122
- 1119616123
- Technological innovations
- Research and development projects
- Innovations
- Projets de recherche et de d�eveloppement
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Industrial Management
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Management
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Management Science
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Organizational Behavior
- Research and development projects
- Technological innovations
- 658.514 23
- HD45
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed April 30, 2019).
Cover; Half-Title Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Foreword; List of Abbreviations; Acknowledgments; Introduction: On the Imperative for Responsible Innovation in Contemporary Market Societies; I.1. What's behind the "E"?; I.2. The imperative for responsible innovation; I.3. Market societies and the RRI challenge; I.4. The challenges before the RRI field; 1. RRI as Social Critique: Achievements and Drawbacks; 1.1. RRI and its "precursors" -- what's new?; 1.2. Addressing the mischiefs of free markets; 1.3. Democracy in distress: the prospects of collective responsibility
2. Responsibility and the Future2.1. The anticipatory aspect of RRI; 2.2. Innovation and manageability of the future: on uncertainty, control and regulation; 2.3. Why responsibility?; 3. EU Governance of RTD and the Market; 3.1. On governance and good governance: order with/out authority?; 3.2. The economic "imprint" on the EU governance of RTD; 3.3. EU governance of RTD: is "Science versus Society" actually the problem?; 4. EU Institutional Rationality on RRI; 4.1. On ends and means: EU institutional discourse on the instrumentality of RRI; 4.2. The RRI "keys": keys to what?
4.2.1. Public engagement4.2.2. Open access/open science; 4.2.3. Gender; 4.2.4. Ethics; 4.2.5. Science education; 4.3. Walking the tightrope between democratization and responsibilization; 5. Ethics and the RRI Promise; 5.1. Ethics in the EU governance of RTD: achievements, problems and challenges; 5.2. RRI and rediscovering the promises of the Nuremberg Code (1947); 5.3. The future of ethics in the context of RRI: a gatekeeper of an open door?; 6. Responsibilization in Tension with Market Regulation
6.1. Ethics in the Bermuda Triangle of market mechanisms: innovation, responsibility and the perennial reinvention of capitalism6.2. On the traps behind the notion of "responsibilization" in a market-driven context; 6.3. Going beyond New Public Management?; Conclusion; References; Index; Other titles from iSTE in Interdisciplinarity, Science and Humanities; EULA
This book aims to voice a warm-hearted concern about the enormous obstacles to fulfilling the RRI promise. It proposes some critical reflections on its actual prospects in view of the current politico-economic context. It explores the merits of the recently promoted notion of RRI as yet another strand of social critique when it comes to the role of ethics, responsibility and innovation in shaping the future; it nonetheless focuses on the inevitable impediments as to the meaningful implementation of the idea vis-a-vis the normative structure of contemporary market societies.
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