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Genetically modified organisms and the age of (Un) reason? A critical examination of the rhetoric in the GMO public policy debates in Ghana
Institution:1. Department of Geography, Western University, 1151 Richmond Street, N6A 5C2 Ontario, Canada;2. Department of Environmental Science, School of Biological Sciences, College of Agriculture & Natural Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Ghana;1. Institute of Law Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warszawa, Poland;2. Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute (IHAR) - National Research Institute, Radzików, Poland;3. Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznań, Poland;1. National Institute of Agricultural Technology (INTA), Oliveros Agricultural Experimental Station, Oliveros, Argentina;2. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Department of Agronomy& Horticulture, Lincoln, USA;3. Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Department of Plant Science, Aas, Norway;4. Parthenope University of Naples, Department of Science and Technology, Naples, Italy;1. Aix-Marseille Université, ADEF, Marseille, France;2. Université Grenoble-Alpes, Laboratoire d’Ecologie Alpine (LECA), 38000 Grenoble, France;3. University of Bayreuth, Centre of Math & Science Education, NW-1, D-95447 Bayreuth Germany
Abstract:Using narrative policy analysis we examined the adversarial rhetoric of claims-makers in their bid to undermine alternative and conflicting accounts of GMOs as environmental and human health risk and to forestall any challenges to the scientific authority of the technological deterministic account of the GMO policy debates in Ghana. The study shows that the GMO discourse was built with the rhetorical frames of smallholder farmer vulnerability and entitlement used in the account it contradicts, thereby legitimating its own appeal for responsive remedies. Civil society claims attacked GMOs as discriminatory and as an environmental and human health risk. Government and scientists engaged in unsympathetic counter rhetorical strategies in hopes of debunking or neutralizing the claim made by civil society. In other words, Government and scientists were denying the claim that GMO was discriminatory and posed significant human health risk, as well as the call to action to do something about GMOs. Civil society adapted the counter rhetoric of insincerity, claiming that scientists had some kind of “hidden agenda” behind their claim, such as eagerness to just earn money from their patents on GMOs. It is imperative that communication on GMOs includes the underlying assumptions, the uncertainties and the probabilities associated with both best and worst case scenarios. This is a necessary condition to minimise misinformation on GMOs but may be insufficient to completely erase conspiracy theories from the minds of the public especially when scientists and government are perceived to be biased towards multinational corporations that are ostensibly preoccupied with making profits.
Keywords:GMOs  Rhetoric  Idioms  Policy  Human health  Risk  Narratives
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