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Emotions and risk regulation

From Economy to Society? Perspectives on Transnational Risk Regulation

ISBN: 978-1-78190-738-2, eISBN: 978-1-78190-739-9

Publication date: 28 December 2013

Abstract

The concept of risk is often approached as if it is self-defining. Yet placing an event or activity in the category of “risk” is a categorization with consequences. Framing normatively complex problems like immigration, terrorism, or monetary crisis as risks that require regulating suggests that certain cognitive tools are best suited for analyzing them. It suggests that the problems are measurable or quantifiable, that they lend themselves to utilitarian calculus, and that they have ascertainably correct solutions that require no value judgments. This article employs emotion theory to illustrate the difficulties with approaching normatively complex areas of governmental policy through the framework of risk regulation. It argues that interdisciplinary inquiry into the role of emotion in human behavior sheds light on how risks are assessed, prioritized, and ameliorated, on how the category of risk is constructed, and on how that categorization affects the cognitive tools and approaches we bring to normatively complex problems. The article begins with a brief discussion of behavioral law and economics, which styles itself a corrective to law and economics, but which replicates its fatal flaw: its unrealistic view of human behavior. Next it turns to two more specific problems with the standard notion of risk formulation. First, the standard notion reads out the essential role of emotion in deliberation about risk regulation and overvalues top-down expert knowledge. Second, it reads out the heuristics that erase patterns and maintain the status quo. Finally, the article will focus on two illustrative case studies, the Chicago heat wave of 1995, and Hurricane Katrina.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgment

The author wishes to thank Bettina Lange for the invitation to participate in this written symposium and the conference on which the articles are based. She also wishes to thank the two anonymous reviewers for very helpful comments.

Citation

Bandes, S.A. (2013), "Emotions and risk regulation", From Economy to Society? Perspectives on Transnational Risk Regulation (Studies in Law, Politics, and Society, Vol. 62), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 219-237. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1059-4337(2013)0000062009

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013 Emerald Group Publishing Limited