Second International Workshop on
Regulated Agent-Based Social Systems:
Theories and Applications (RASTA'03)
Workshop date: 23 June, 2003
Abstract for
- 16:00 - 16:45
- Social Responsiblity for E-Governance
Rosaria Conte and Mario Paolucci
This paper presents a social cognitive model of social responsibility
as implying the deliberative capacity of the bearer but not
necessarily her decision to act or not. Also, responsibility is
defined as an objective property of agents, which they cannot remit at
their will.
Two specific aspects are analysed:
(a) the action of
"counting upon" given agents as responsible entities, and
(b) the
consequent property of accountability: responsibility allows to
identify the locus of accountability, that is, which agents are
accountable for which events and to what extent. Agents responsible
for certain events, and upon which others count, are asked to account
or respond for these events.
Two types of responsibility are
distinguished and their commonalities pointed out:
(a) a primary form
of responsibility, which is a consequence of mere deliberative power,
and
(b) a task-based form, which is a consequence of task
commitment. Primary responsibility is a relation between deliberative
agents and social harms, whether these are intended and believed or
not, and whether they are actually caused by the agent or not. The
boundaries of responsibility will be investigated, and the conceptual
links of responsibility with obligation and guilt will be
examined. Task-based responsibility implies task- or role-commitment.
Furthermore, individual versus shared versus collective responsibility are
distinguished.
Considerations about the potential benefits and utility of the
analysis proposed for in the field of e-governance are
highlighted. Concluding remarks and ideas for future works are
discussed in the final section.
Last modified: 12.06.2003
Daniel Moldt
Programme of RASTA'03: http://www2.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/tgi/events/rasta03/programme.html