Media as mediators in a science-based issue: politics, foreign influence and implications on adoption of Genetically Modified Organisms in food production in Uganda

IF 2 Q2 COMMUNICATION JCOM-Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2023-01-16 DOI:10.22323/2.22010203
I. Lukanda, Sara Namusoga-Kaale, George Claassen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The paper highlights the feedback loop between media, politics, foreign influence and science in relation to the adoption of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) in food production in Uganda to demonstrate that socio-cultural considerations are important in the GMO science and technology debates. Based on the science-in-society model, the findings from a content analysis of newspaper articles over a four-year period, supplemented by interviews with scientists, activists from non-governmental organisations, journalists, and Members of Parliament's Science and Technology Committee, the study found that food is a politically thick issue. Both activists and scientists opportunistically use the media, the platforms where the public access and contribute content, to appeal to the politicians to legislate GMOs in their favour, arguing that the activists or the scientists' position is in the `public interest'. Often, such coverage produces a paradox for the public by accelerating uncertainty regarding the science and the products of genetic modification, especially when politicians fail to decide for fear of the political implications of their action as is the case in Uganda.
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媒体作为一个基于科学的问题的调解人:政治、外国影响和对乌干达在粮食生产中采用转基因生物的影响
这篇论文强调了媒体、政治、外国影响和科学之间关于乌干达在粮食生产中采用转基因生物(GMOs)的反馈循环,以证明社会文化考虑在转基因科学和技术辩论中是重要的。该研究基于社会科学模型,对四年来报纸文章的内容分析,辅以对科学家、非政府组织活动家、记者和议会科学技术委员会成员的采访,发现食品是一个政治上很重要的问题。活动人士和科学家都投机地利用媒体这个公众获取和贡献内容的平台,呼吁政客们在转基因生物立法上对他们有利,认为活动人士或科学家的立场符合“公共利益”。这种报道往往会给公众带来矛盾,因为它加速了人们对基因改造科学和产品的不确定性,尤其是当政治家们由于担心其行动的政治影响而未能做出决定时,就像乌干达的情况一样。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
22.20%
发文量
80
审稿时长
5 weeks
期刊最新文献
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