ArnsteinS. R. (1969), ‘A Ladder of Citizen Participation’, AIP Journal, (July): 216–224.
2.
BeckU. (1992), Risk Society—Towards a New Modernity, London, Thousand Oaks & New Delhi: Sage.
3.
BeckU. (1995a), Ecological Enlightenment: essays on the politics of the risk society, New Jersey: Humanities Press.
4.
BeckU. (1995b), Ecological Politics in an Age of Risk, Cambridge: Polity Press.
5.
BeckU. (1999), World Risk Society, Cambridge: Polity Press.
6.
CallonM. (1999), ‘Actor-network theory—the market test’, in LawJ. and HassardJ. (eds), Actor Network Theory and After, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers/The Sociological Review.
7.
DryzekJ. S. (2000), Deliberative democracy and beyond: liberals, critics, contestations, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
8.
KaufmannA. S. (1960), ‘Human Nature and Participatory Democracy’, in FriedrichC. J. (ed.), Responsibility: NOMOS III, New York: The Liberal Arts Press.
9.
HabermasJ. (1984), The Theory of Communicative Action: Vol. 1: Reason and the Rationalisation of Society, London: Polity Press.
10.
HabermasJ. (1987), The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, Cambridge: Polity Press.
11.
HealyS. (2001), ‘Risk as Social Process: the end of ‘the age of appealing to the facts’?’, The Journal of Hazardous Materials, 86(1–3): 39–53.
12.
HealyS. (2003), ‘A ‘Post-Foundational’ Interpretation of Risk—Risk as ‘Performance’, Journal of Risk Research, in press.
13.
HoppeR. (1999), ‘Policy analysis, science and politics: from ‘speaking truth to power’ to ‘making sense together”, Science and Public Policy, 26(3): 201–210, endnote 1.
14.
InnesJ. E. and BooherD. E. (1999), ‘Consensus Building as Role Playing and Bricolage—Toward a Theory of Collaborative Planning’, Journal of the American Planning Association, 65(1): 9–26.
15.
IrwinA. (1995), Citizen Science: A Study of People, Expertise and Sustainable Development, London: Routledge.
16.
IrwinA. (2001), Sociology and the Environment—A Critical Introduction to Society, Nature and Knowledge, Cambridge: Polity.
17.
IrwinA. and WynneB. (1996), Misunderstanding Science? The Public Reconstruction of Science and Technology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
18.
KothariU. (2001), ‘Power, Knowledge and Social Control in Participatory Development’, in CookeB. and KothariU. (eds), Participation: the new tyranny?, London and New York: Zed Books.
19.
LatourB. (1993), We Have Never Been Modern, Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
20.
LawJ. (1999), ‘After ANT: complexity, naming and topology’, in LawJ. and HassardJ. (eds), Actor Network Theory and After, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers/The Sociological Review.
21.
HMSO (2000), Science and Society, Report of the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology (Lord Jenkin, Chair), London: HMSO.
22.
LawJ. (2001), ‘Ordering and Obduracy’, Lancaster: the Centre for Science Studies and the Department of Sociology, Lancaster University [http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/sociology/soc068jl.html (version: obduracy4.doc; 3rd January)].
23.
LevidowL. and MarrisC. (2001), ‘Science and governance in Europe: lessons from the case of agricultural biotechnology’, Science and Public Policy, 28(5): 345–360.
24.
MartinA. (1998), ‘Anthropology and the Cultural Study of Science’, Science, Technology and Human Values, 23(1): 24–44.
25.
MolA. (1999), ‘Ontological Politics. A word and some questions’, in LawJ. and HassardJ. (eds), Actor Network Theory and After, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers/The Sociological Review.
26.
RennO.Blättel-MinkB. and KastenholzH. (1997), ‘Discursive Methods in Environmental Decision Making’, Business Strategy and the Environment, 6: 218–231.
27.
RennO. (1998), ‘The role of risk communication and public dialogue for improving risk management’, Risk Decision and Policy, 3(1), 5–30.
28.
RyanR.RudlandS. and PhelpsA. (2001), Enhanced Stormwater Management in Bronte Catchment Through Local Community Participation—Improving stormwater outcomes while improving democratic capacity: Final Report, Sydney: Brian Elton and Associates Pty Ltd.
29.
SchechnerR. (1988), Performance Theory, New York and London: Routledge.
30.
SchechnerR. (1993), The future of ritual: writings on culture and performance, New York and London: Routledge.
31.
SeguinE. (2000), ‘The UK BSE crisis: strengths and weaknesses of existing conceptual approaches’, Science and Public Policy, 27(4): 293–301.
32.
SquiresJ. (1998), ‘In different voices: deliberative democracy and aestheticist politics’ in GoodJ. and VelodyI. (eds), The Politics of Postmodernity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
33.
TanesiniA. (1999), An Introduction to Feminist Epistemologies, Oxford: Blackwell.