“…Contributing to this literature, we wish to theoretically elaborate how practices of risk amplification by citizens can help to elevate personal vulnerability and objections to risk beyond a “local matter of concern” to produce wider impacts at different social, political, and economic scales over time (Kasperson & Kasperson, ; Smit & Wandel, ). Particularly, we argue that risk amplification may at times characteristically reflect an “adaptive” communicative response that is undertaken by citizens in “non‐ideal” contexts when local communities are confronted by intractable constraints and instrumental exchanges of risk‐related information that are perceived to be against community interests (Gillespie, Reader, Cornish, & Campbell, ; Murdock et al., ). For example, past research indicates that citizens can assure wider public attention especially when they are able to rhetorically establish and renegotiate the boundaries of expertise and power underlying policy decisions, irrespective of official declarations of acceptable risk, even in cases of mandatory technology rollout (Bröer, de Graaff, Duyvendak, & Wester, ; Drake, ; Hess & Coley, ; Kasperson et al., ; Kinsella, Kelly, & Autry, ; Motion, Leitch, & Weaver, ; Pidgeon et al., ; Wynne, ).…”