Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept

Abstract This study demonstrates that a decision-making process utilising ‘the veil of ignorance’ concept, defined in process terms as beginning from a blank slate encompassing the entire country as potential sites and shortlisting candidate sites based on scientific (geological) safety, promotes pu...

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Main Authors: Miki Yokoyama, Susumu Ohnuma, Hideaki Osawa, Shoji Ohtomo, Yukio Hirose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2023-09-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02139-2
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author Miki Yokoyama
Susumu Ohnuma
Hideaki Osawa
Shoji Ohtomo
Yukio Hirose
author_facet Miki Yokoyama
Susumu Ohnuma
Hideaki Osawa
Shoji Ohtomo
Yukio Hirose
author_sort Miki Yokoyama
collection DOAJ
description Abstract This study demonstrates that a decision-making process utilising ‘the veil of ignorance’ concept, defined in process terms as beginning from a blank slate encompassing the entire country as potential sites and shortlisting candidate sites based on scientific (geological) safety, promotes public acceptance of siting a repository for the geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste and fosters procedural fairness. A hypothetical scenario experiment was conducted in Japan, manipulating the site selection process by setting two conditions—one being the application/proposal condition that the Japanese government currently employs, such as an application by municipalities or a proposal by the government, and the other being the veil of ignorance condition, in which multiple candidate areas are selected from a blank slate for the entire land area based purely on geological factors. Three stages of acceptance were presumed—at the level of general management policy, the site selection process itself with a specified decision policy, and the siting of a repository in their area of residence. Two hypotheses were tested: (a) the veil of ignorance condition will be evaluated as a more acceptable and fairer procedure and will engender increased national consensus than the application/proposal condition at the site selection and repository siting stages, and (b) procedural fairness and national consensus will impact acceptance at each stage; these variables at each stage help shape the same variables in the next stage. The results supported these hypotheses. This study discusses the importance of the site selection process, beginning where any de facto site can be a candidate and shortlisting the candidate sites based on scientific criteria.
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spelling doaj.art-512c15c24de348fd88652de2df67cad52023-11-26T12:37:40ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922023-09-0110111010.1057/s41599-023-02139-2Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ conceptMiki Yokoyama0Susumu Ohnuma1Hideaki Osawa2Shoji Ohtomo3Yukio Hirose4Social Informatics Laboratories, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone CorporationDepartment of Behavioral Science, Graduate School of Letters, Hokkaido UniversitySector of Nuclear Fuel, Decommissioning and Waste Management Technology Development, Japan Atomic Energy AgencyDepartment of Communication, College of Interhuman Symbiotic Studies, Kanto Gakuin UniversityFaculty of Societal Safety Sciences, Kansai UniversityAbstract This study demonstrates that a decision-making process utilising ‘the veil of ignorance’ concept, defined in process terms as beginning from a blank slate encompassing the entire country as potential sites and shortlisting candidate sites based on scientific (geological) safety, promotes public acceptance of siting a repository for the geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste and fosters procedural fairness. A hypothetical scenario experiment was conducted in Japan, manipulating the site selection process by setting two conditions—one being the application/proposal condition that the Japanese government currently employs, such as an application by municipalities or a proposal by the government, and the other being the veil of ignorance condition, in which multiple candidate areas are selected from a blank slate for the entire land area based purely on geological factors. Three stages of acceptance were presumed—at the level of general management policy, the site selection process itself with a specified decision policy, and the siting of a repository in their area of residence. Two hypotheses were tested: (a) the veil of ignorance condition will be evaluated as a more acceptable and fairer procedure and will engender increased national consensus than the application/proposal condition at the site selection and repository siting stages, and (b) procedural fairness and national consensus will impact acceptance at each stage; these variables at each stage help shape the same variables in the next stage. The results supported these hypotheses. This study discusses the importance of the site selection process, beginning where any de facto site can be a candidate and shortlisting the candidate sites based on scientific criteria.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02139-2
spellingShingle Miki Yokoyama
Susumu Ohnuma
Hideaki Osawa
Shoji Ohtomo
Yukio Hirose
Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept
title_full Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept
title_fullStr Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept
title_full_unstemmed Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept
title_short Public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites: a decision-making process utilising the ‘veil of ignorance’ concept
title_sort public acceptance of nuclear waste disposal sites a decision making process utilising the veil of ignorance concept
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02139-2
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