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Scientific Information, Elite Attitudes, and the Public Debate Over Food Safety
Authors:Ardith Maney  Eric Plutzer
Affiliation:Ardith Maney is professor of political science at Iowa State University.;Eric Plutzer is associate professor of political science at the Pennsylvania State University.
Abstract:Why do consumers often react with alarm to food technologies (such as irradiation, genetic engineering, artificial hormones, and chemical pesticides) that scientists regard as essentially safe? We examine the attitudes toward food safety of three types of elites who serve as providers of scientific information regarding food safety to the United States public. Previous research suggests that journalists are likely to exaggerate risks associated with emerging food technologies, while minimizing risks associated with natural pathogens. This bias is hypothesized to be political in origin. By and large, our sample of newspaper editors was only slightly more concerned than were United States government policymakers and a sample of scientists. The expected pattern of alarm occurs clearly only in the case of irradiation. In addition, modest correlations of ideology to safety assessments were found for all three types of elites.
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