Difference between revisions of "Science Media Centre"

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== Funding ==
 
== Funding ==
  
The centre states that it is "independent from any single scientific body. To preserve our independence, funding has been sought from a wide variety of sources, none of which have contributed more than 5% of the total running costs (£250,000 per year).
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The centre states that it is "independent from any single scientific body. To preserve our independence, funding has been sought from a wide variety of sources, none of which have contributed more than 5% of the total running costs (£250,000 per year). Media groups, industry, professional associations and individuals are all taking part in funding the Science Media Centre. "{{Ref|1}}
Media groups, industry, professional associations and individuals are all taking part in funding the Science Media Centre. " {{Ref|1}}
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Sponsors of the SMC listed in a SMC Consultation Report of March 2002 are:<ref>Consultation Report, Science Media Centre, March 2002, p. 25</ref>
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*[[Beeson Gregory]]
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*[[BP-Amoco]]
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*[[British Energy]]
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*The [[British Land Company]]
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*[[Conoco]]
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*[[Co-op]]
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*[[Dupont]]
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*[[EPSRC]]
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*[[Merlin Biosciences]]
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*[[Pfizer]]
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*The [[Posen Foundation]]
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*[[PowderJect]]
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*[[Royal College of Physicians]]
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*The [[Science Council]]
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*[[Smith & Nephew]]
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*The [[Society for General Microbiology]]
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*[[Tate & Lyle]]
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*[[Tesco]]
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*[[Trinity Mirror]] PLC
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*Dr [[David Moore]]
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*Dr [[Geoff Andrews]]
  
 
The following link lists their funders to Feb 2007.
 
The following link lists their funders to Feb 2007.

Revision as of 17:10, 28 September 2009

Foodspin badge.png This article is part of the Foodspin project of Spinwatch.

The Science Media Centre (SMC) began work in December 2001. It is housed within the Royal Institution (RI).

Susan Greenfield, the RI's director, describes herself as 'the midwife' of the initiative while the support of UK science minister, Lord David Sainsbury, has also been noted in articles about the SMC (eg, New independent media centre aims to give scientists a voice, Financial Times, Jan 30, 2001).

Science Media Centre staff:

Fiona Fox, Director, is said to be in overall charge of running the Centre and setting its strategic direction together with the SMC's Board. Fox's background, which includes undisclosed links to the Living Marxism network, is mainly in media relations.
Dr Mark Peplow , Science Information Officer, deals with the hard science questions and liaises with the scientific community and the SMC's Science Advisory Panel which includes Greenfield.

Becky Morelle, Media Relations Assistant, is responsible for 'communicating the Centre's key messages' to the media. She also manages 'the media database' which includes information on which scientists journalists should be referred to. An article on the SMC co-authored by Greenfield says, 'Greenfield's aim is to help journalists to find the right scientist to talk to at the right time.' Morelle was a student of Greenfield's at Oxford and worked briefly in Greenfield's office at the RI before being appointed to her post at the SMC.

Despite its close links with Greenfield and the RI, the SMC describes itself as 'an independent venture'. Prior to its launch, Greenfield said she hoped to get money for the project 'from the trade unions' (Financial Times, Jan 30, 2001), but that never materialised and most of the SMC's funding is via corporate donations. Funders with biotech interests include Astra Zeneca, Dupont, Pfizer and Powderject.

Within a matter of months of its launch the SMC was already embroiled in controversy over its activities. It stood accused of operating 'a sort of Mandelsonian rapid rebuttal unit', and of employing 'some of the clumsiest spin techniques of New Labour'. These claims arose out of allegations of a 'secret campaign to descredit' a BBC drama relating to GM crops (see: Lobby group 'led GM thriller critics', The Observer, June 2, 2002). The connections of the director of the SMC to the Living Marxism network, and the SMC's funding, have also attracted critical comment.

Dr David Miller of the Stirling Media Research Institute is amongst the SMC's critics, 'The Science Media Centre (SMC) is... not as independent as it appears. It was set up to provide accurate, independent scientific information for the media but its views are largely in line with government scientific policy. The SMC made much of its charitable status, yet its charity number is the same as that for the Royal Institution (RI); in other words, it is almost synonymous with the RI. Similarly, its independence was supposed to be guaranteed by the fact that no more than 5% of its funding comes from any one source; yet 70% of its funding comes from business, which could be said to have similar interests. The SMC has since had the ac.uk removed from its email address after complaints that only academic institutions that were not corporately funded were entitled to this were upheld.' (The Guardian, Tuesday February 11, 2003)

The SMC describes itself as 'working to promote the voices, stories and views of the scientific community to the news media when science is in the headlines' (emphasis added). It also says it's in the business of 'pro-actively promoting a spectrum of scientific opinion ' (emphasis added).

This language is derived from a Consultation Report on its role, published by the SMC in March 2002 and said to have been the result of wide consultation with leading scientists, science communicators and the media. The topic of GM comes up repeatedly - almost 20 times in a report which in full only runs to around 30 pages including appendices.

Revealingly, the report notes that 'the majority of people consulted - including many of those who helped establish the initiative... reminded the SMC team several times that the impetus for the initiative came from people who are concerned about improving the image of science and renewing public trust in it. They also pointed out that the impetus for the Centre emerged from a strong consensus that media coverage of such issues as GM and BSE had been "bad for science" .'

In a Financial Times article published a full 15 months earlier, the emphasis is similar, the role being planned for the Centre would be to help 'sceptical and impatient journalists' get their stories right on controversial issues such as 'animal research, cloning and genetically modified food' (New independent media centre aims to give scientists a voice, Financial Times, Jan 30, 2001)

In an article co-authored by Greenfield in the Independent, we are also given a clear account of the motivation behind the Centre, 'The reduction of a complex branch of biological engineering to "Frankenstein food" was typical of media hopelessly ill equipped to discuss scientific progress rationally. And into the vacuum stepped big business. What inflicted the greatest damage on GM science was that the case for the defence was fronted by the bio-tech groups Monsanto and AstraZeneca.'

If this suggests the SMC's role is to replace the biotech industry as the champions of GM, then the Consultation Report contains a more reassuring quote from Greenfield, 'The SMC is unashamedly pro-science but it is also independent of any particular agenda. That means the SMC will provide access to the wide spectrum of scientific opinion on any one issue. We can provide an anti-GM scientist and a pro-GM scientist... etc, etc.'

This chimes in precisely with the SMC's promotion of itself as being 'free of any particular agenda within science' and and as striving 'to promote a breadth of scientific opinion - especially where there are clear divisions within science' (emphasis added).

Yet the SMC has never provided the views of anything remotely resembling an anti-GM scientist in any of its press releases on GM stories, which are typically made up of a list of quotes from what appear to be a range of scientists. By contrast it has been happy to host the press launch of the Agricultural Biotechnology Council (ABC) - the public relations campaign for GM foods set up by the biotechnology industry. Similarly, it regularly included comments from Stephen Smith, when he was the head of the ABC and of the biotech company Syngenta Seeds UK, along with those of other 'scientists' in its GM-related press releases. The comments it includes in these are invariably supportive of GM or are critical of research raising questions about GM, and some of the comments come from scientists with significant but undeclared conflicts of interest. For example, in more than one of its press releases those who are part of industry-funded lobby groups, like the scientists who work with CropGen, are presented as simply a 'Reader in Ecology' or a 'Visiting Professor of Biology' without any mention of their lobby-group affiliations. By contrast, in the SMC's Consultation Report the SMC not only does not hesitate to identify one of these scientists as 'Professor Vivian Moses, Chair of CropGen', but only identifies him as such (eg p.27).

Greenfield, as well as being the director of the Royal Institution, is on the Advisory Board of the mostly industry-funded Social Issues Research Centre (SIRC). Together with the SIRC, Greenfield, on behalf of the RI, co-convened a Forum which laid down guidelines for the media - guidelines which had largely originated with the Royal Society - and which called for the establishment of a secret directory of 'expert contacts' with whom journalists should check out their science stories prior to publication.

The Science Media Centre was to be a new body 'less encumbered by past perceptions' - almost certainly an admission that the Royal Society's reputation had been damaged by allegations of its operating a media rebuttal unit in relation to the issue of GM foods. Sense About Science appears to have been set up for similar reasons. Like the Science Media Centre, the director of Sense About Science was also drawn from the Living Marxism network. Interestingly, in the SMC's Consultation Report the Chairman of Sense About Science, Lord Dick Taverne, was among those who 'argued that the SMC should try to identify spokespeople who could display the same levels of passion and conviction as the campaigning NGOs.'

Funding

The centre states that it is "independent from any single scientific body. To preserve our independence, funding has been sought from a wide variety of sources, none of which have contributed more than 5% of the total running costs (£250,000 per year). Media groups, industry, professional associations and individuals are all taking part in funding the Science Media Centre. "[1]

Sponsors of the SMC listed in a SMC Consultation Report of March 2002 are:[1]

The following link lists their funders to Feb 2007. [SMC Funders]

Contact Details

Address: 19/21 Albemarle St, London,W1S 4BS.UK.

Website:http://www.sciencemediacentre.org/

Tel:tel: +44 (0)20 7670 2980

E-mail:  smc@sciencemediacentre.org

Notes

  1. ^http://www.sciencemediacentre.org/funding.htm

Notes

  1. Consultation Report, Science Media Centre, March 2002, p. 25