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Precautions against What? The Availability Heuristic and Cross-Cultural Risk PerceptionsCass R. SunsteinHarvard Law School August 2004 U Chicago Law & Economics, Olin Working Paper No. 220; AEI-Brookings Joint Center Working Paper No. 04-22 Abstract: Because risks are all on sides of social situations, it is not possible to be globally "precautionary." Hence the Precautionary Principle, in its strongest forms, runs into fatal conceptual difficulties; any precautions will themselves create hazards of one or another kind. When the Precautionary Principle seems to give guidance, it is often because of the availability heuristic, which can make some risks stand out as particularly salient, whatever their actual magnitude. The same heuristic helps to explain differences across groups, cultures, and even nations in the perception of risks, especially when linked with such social processes as cascades and group polarization. An important complication here here is that what is available is sometimes a result of predispositions, cultural and otherwise. There are complex links among availability, social processes for the spreading of information, and predispositions.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 39 Keywords: precautionary principle, risk working papers seriesDate posted: August 18, 2004Suggested CitationContact Information
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