Framing ‘fracking’: Exploring public perceptions of hydraulic fracturing in the United Kingdom

The prospect of fracking in the United Kingdom has been accompanied by significant public unease. We outline how the policy debate is being framed by UK institutional actors, finding evidence of a dominant discourse in which the policy approach is defined through a deficit model of public understand...

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Published inPublic understanding of science (Bristol, England) Vol. 26; no. 1; pp. 89 - 104
Main Authors Williams, Laurence, Macnaghten, Phil, Davies, Richard, Curtis, Sarah
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 01.01.2017
Sage Publications Ltd
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ISSN0963-6625
1361-6609
DOI10.1177/0963662515595159

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Summary:The prospect of fracking in the United Kingdom has been accompanied by significant public unease. We outline how the policy debate is being framed by UK institutional actors, finding evidence of a dominant discourse in which the policy approach is defined through a deficit model of public understanding of science and in which a technical approach to feasibility and safety is deemed as sufficient grounds for good policymaking. Deploying a deliberative focus group methodology with lay publics across different sites in the north of England, we find that these institutional framings are poorly aligned with participants’ responses. We find that unease regularly overflows the focus on safety and feasibility and cannot be satisfactorily explained by a lack of understanding on the part of participants. We find that scholarship from science and technology studies productively elucidates our participants’ largely sceptical positions, and orientates strategies for responding to them more effectively.
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ISSN:0963-6625
1361-6609
DOI:10.1177/0963662515595159