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Previous media releases

2010

2009

  • John Downer comments on Hudson Miracle
    21 January 2009

    In the wake of last week's drama on the Hudson River it is worth reflecting on the dramatic tests that regulators use to measure the 'bird-resilience' of modern jet engines.

    How do we know if an engine would safely swallow a bird? And what can the answer to this question teach us about our relationships with the technologies we depend on. John Downer comments in his article 'Epistemological Chicken: What do we learn form aircraft 'bird-ingestion' tests?'.

    John Downer is a Research Officer at the ESRC Centre for Analysis of Risk and Regulation (CARR) at the London School of Economics. He is author of "When the Chick Hits the Fan: Representativeness and Reproducibility in Technological Testing." in Social Studies of Science. Vol. 31 No.1 Feb. 2007 pp.7-26

    Contact: Pranav Bihari, CARR, at 020 7849 4635 or risk@lse.ac.uk

  • When failure is an option
    15 May 2009

    From pacemakers to power-plants, we are surrounded by technologies that cannot be allowed to fail. For this reason, we must know the reliability of such technologies before we approve them. The high stakes demand high certainty, yet such knowledge is often more ambiguous than we are led to believe.

    Downer's paper 'When Failure is an Option: Redundancy, reliability and regulation in complex technical systems' explores our ability to understand complex machines by focusing on the history and logic of 'redundancy' in mechanical engineering. Using civil aircraft as a case study, it shows how reliability assessments of potentially hazardous technologies are built on redundancy, and explains why that foundation is frailer than it appears.

    John Downer is a Research Officer at the ESRC Centre for Analysis of Risk and Regulation (CARR) at the London School of Economics. He is author of "When the Chick Hits the Fan: Representativeness and Reproducibility in Technological Testing." in Social Studies of Science. Vol. 31 No.1 Feb. 2007 pp.7-26

2008

2007

2006

  • Risk and regulation - balancing consumer and business interest group needs
    12 December 2006

     
  • Consumers have as much influence as the state when it comes to steering risk management practice by business
    19 September 2006
     
  • Aviation safety research from LSE's CARR cited by the UK's chief medical officer
    21 July 2006
     
  • Risk Regulation: BSE ... Ten Years On
    2 March 2006
     
  • Outbreak?  Pandemic risk and risk management in the 21st century
    20 February 2006

2005

2004

2003

  • Opening the Pandora's box of public opinion
    8 December 2003
     
  • When governments neglect risk
    15 May 2003

2002

  • Climate of suspicion better than a thousand pages of regulation, say LSE Professors
    28 October 2002

2001

  • Joining the risk management business
    2 April 2001

2000

  • New directions in researching risk and regulation
    Thursday 12 October 2000

     
  • Deutsche Bank invests in LSE's risk research
    15 March 2000

1999

  • The new risk management
    LSE launches Centre for the Analysis of Risk and Regulation
    9 December 1999