Difference between revisions of "Social Issues Research Centre"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(Links to Front groups)
(Contact)
Line 108: Line 108:
  
 
Website: http://www.sirc.org/
 
Website: http://www.sirc.org/
 +
 +
Address:
 +
:Social Issues Research Centre
 +
:28 St Clements
 +
:Oxford UK
 +
:OX4 1AB
 +
 +
Telephone: +44 1865 262255
 +
 +
Fax: +44 1865 793137
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
[[Category:Alcohol]][[category:Alcohol Lobby Groups]][[category:Alcohol Front Groups]][[Category:Front Groups]][[Category:GM]][[Category:Corporate Science (GM)]][[Category:GM Lobby Groups]][[Category:LM group]]
 
[[Category:Alcohol]][[category:Alcohol Lobby Groups]][[category:Alcohol Front Groups]][[Category:Front Groups]][[Category:GM]][[Category:Corporate Science (GM)]][[Category:GM Lobby Groups]][[Category:LM group]]

Revision as of 10:21, 25 June 2009

The Social Issues Research Centre (SIRC) calls itself

an independent, non-profit organisation founded to conduct research on social and lifestyle issues, monitor and assess global sociocultural trends and provide new insights on human behaviour and social relations.

It says it

aims to provide a balanced, calm and thoughtful perspective on social issues, promoting open and rational debates based on evidence rather than ideology... SIRC operates a permanent ‘social intelligence’ unit, engaged in continuous monitoring and assessment of significant social, cultural and ideological trends.[1]

SIRC and genetic modification (GM)

SIRC claims it seeks to establish a "serious, rational and calm debate" on GM to counteract "deceitful, agenda-driven campaigning". For this reason, says SIRC, it is working "in conjunction with the Royal Institution, to seek a remedy to this dangerous state of affairs."[2] The SIRC, in the words of a profile in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), "fosters the image of an ultraconcerned public spirited group" and of "a heavyweight research body".[3] In fact, it is neither.

As the BMJ notes, "on closer inspection it transpires that this research organisation shares the same offices, directors and leading personnel as a commercial market research company called MCM Research."[4] Both are based at the same Oxford address.

SIRC and the food and drinks industries

SIRC has received funding from the food and drinks industry (e.g. Bestfoods, the giant US food group now part of Unilever), and from its sister organisation MCM Research Ltd, whose clients come from the food, drinks, oil and pharmaceutical industries.

On its website MCM says that it is "well-known for its research aimed at positive communication and PR initiatives".[5]

MCM's website used to be more explicit about what it had to offer:

Do your PR initiatives sometimes look too much like PR initiatives? MCM conducts social/psychological research on the positive aspects of your business... The results do not read like PR literature... Our reports are credible, interesting and entertaining in their own right. This is why they capture the imagination of the media and your customers.[6]

According to the BMJ article, MCM’s clients include Bass Taverns, the Brewers and Licensed Retail Association, the Cider Industry Council, the Civil Aviation Authority, Conoco, Coral Racing, Grand Metropolitan Retail, the Portman Group (jointly funded by Bass, Courage, Guinness, etc), Pubmaster, Rank Leisure, and Whitbread Inns, as well as several Australian brewing concerns and several independent television companies.[7]

How to report science

The SIRC set up a Forum to lay down guidelines for journalists and scientists on how they should report science stories in the media. It was co-convened with the Royal Institution whose director, Susan Greenfield, is also an advisor to the SIRC. Among those taking part in the Forum were Food Standards Agency chief Sir John Krebs, David Boak of the Royal Society, Lord Dick Taverne, and Michael Fitzpatrick - a stalwart of the Living Marxism network.

In September 2000, Guidelines on Science and Health Communication for the media were published. These guidelines were later fused with a separate but similar set of advice developed by the Royal Society.

The Guidelines focus on how to avoid overstating risk and alarming the public. They have nothing to say about the danger of understating risk, i.e. the kind of false reassurances that go to the heart of the BSE crisis.

The Guidelines, similarly, have little to say about the dangers stemming from conflicts of interest, arising through industry funding of research, etc. This despite a whole series of recent scandals centring on the issue of how commercial interests can undermine free, fair and objective communication about science.

In the words of the Editor of the BMJ, 'These competing interests are very important. It has quite a profound influence on the conclusions.' The BMJ asked SIRC co-director and MCM consultant, Kate Fox, whether she didn't think SIRC faced a conflict of interest in laying down how science should be reported. 'No, I don't think so,' Fox told the BMJ. 'The kinds of work we have done at MCM have been fairly worthy things... They are fairly uncontroversial'.

Among those who helped to produce the guidelines or were consulted by SIRC:

HRT and Big Pharma

In 2003 the BMJ turned its attention again to the SIRC, noting how the organisation HRT Aware had commissioned the SIRC to produce a report which 'last month won a Communique award from the magazine Pharmaceutical Marketing in the public relations and medical education category. SIRC's research linked the improved lives of modern day postmenopausal women to HRT.' It led to 'widespread-and supportive-media coverage in the UK'. The Evening Standard, for instance, ran the headline, "HRT 'leads to better sex and a happy healthy life'".

But, like virtually all the other media coverage of the SIRC report, the article made no mention of the fact that the SIRC's report had been commissioned by a front group for the pharmaceutical industry, and that it formed part of an industry-fashioned campaign.

Revealingly, the Forum that drew up the guidelines on science and health reporting, did not include anybody from the BMJ or the Lancet, nor the British Medical Association (BMA), all of whom have been very alert to the issues surrounding conflict of interest. The BMA has also been cautious over the GM issue. The Lancet published Dr Arpad Pusztai and Prof Stanley Ewen's research showing adverse effects from GM potatoes. It's editor has also been critical of the Royal Society and the tactics it has adopted in its repeated attacks on Dr Pusztai and his research.

However, while the The Lancet, the BMJ and the BMA were all absent from the Forum, it managed to include several fairly obscure clinicians, suggesting attitude rather than eminence was the real basis of selection. Forum-member Dr Roger Fiskin provides a case in point. He first came to public notice with a letter to Private Eye: 'Prof. Krebs is right and you are wrong: the whole GM debate in the British media has been a disaster as far as public information is concerned. The experiments carried out by Pusztai were, in scientific terms, a pile of steaming horse-shit'. (Private Eye, 24 March 2000, p14)

This savage disparagement of Pusztai's work came from a little-known hospital consultant without a single research publication to his name. Dr Fiskin also wrote to The Lancet, furious at its publication of Pusztai and Ewen's paper. In the context of an attack on the views of the Lancet's editor, Fiskin bemoaned the failure of scientists to attack the media in general with more vigour, 'we as scientists have not been nearly aggressive enough in attacking the scaremongering and sheer nonsense put out by the lay media on a variety of medical and scientific topics.'

On the SIRC's website those with opinions differing from the SIRC's on genetic engineering are given short shrift. For his 'predictable attack on genetic engineering' during a Reith lecture, the Prince of Wales merits an article entitled, 'The madness of Prince Charles'. In an SIRC article attacking another contributor to the Reith lectures, the Indian scientist Dr Vandana Shiva, the SIRC suggests 'more appropriate for a Reith lecture than the ramblings of Dr Shiva', when it comes to the plight of Indian farmers, would have been the contribution of right-wing Daily Telegraph columnist Matt Ridley.

The identity of opinion of an organisation which has the Director of the Royal Institution on its Advisory Board and 'Vox Rationis' as its motto, with a right wing libertarian such as Ridley, should come as no surprise given that many of the SIRC's complaints about the media coverage of the GM issue bear a marked similarity to ones which have surfaced in the output of those, like Ridley, associated either with the far right free market think tank, the Institute of Economic Affairs or with Living Marxism (LM).

Links to front groups

Another indication of what the SIRC apparently regards as models of sound, evidence-based communication is given by its recommended websites. These include the American Council on Science and Health, which the SIRC says has a 'Sensible, balanced approach to a wide range of health issues.' In fact, controversy has raged throughout ACSH's over twenty-year history, focusing particularly on the issue of linkage between its extensive corporate backing (eg Monsanto, Dow, Cyanamid) and its tireless crusading against 'health scares' and the 'toxic terrorists' who promote them.

Alcohol industry clients

With regard to MCM's many drink industry clients, it is worth noting that in the view of Dr Griffith Edwards, editor in chief of the journal Addiction, this is an industry tainted not only by the exploitation of vulnerable populations but by the mounting of attacks on valid research and independent researchers. There is also evidence for its use of front organisations to mount such attacks. Thus, the Portman Group, which presents itself as a drink industry 'watch dog', sought to pay academics substantial sums of money to support 'an anonymous attack on a report by the World Health Organisation that had documented evidence on the relation between alcohol consumption and drinking problems.'

This media and research handling front organisation is on the client list of MCM Research Ltd., SIRC's sister organisation. SIRC director Peter Marsh is on the Board of Trustees of Sense About Science.

Funding

According to its website (February 2006) funding sources are as follows:

SIRC is a non-profit organisation, funded partly by income from our sister organisation MCM Research, which specialises in applying social science to problems faced in both the commercial and public sectors. Clients include the Ministry of Defence, The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), the Home Office, the Portman Group, the Civil Aviation Authority, etc.
SIRC receives funding in its own right for research on a wide range of topics, including monitoring and analysis of media coverage of various issues. Recent clients and contributors to continuing programmes include: '3', Alliance and Leicester, BT, Cadbury Schweppes, CBA, Department of Health, Diageo, eBay, Egg, Esure, European Union, Fisher Price, Halifax, Home Office, Kellogg's, Kimberly-Clark, Masterfoods, Mattel, Palm One, Pimms, Renault, Sugar Bureau, Telewest, etc.

People

Staff

Advisors

Contact

Website: http://www.sirc.org/

Address:

Social Issues Research Centre
28 St Clements
Oxford UK
OX4 1AB

Telephone: +44 1865 262255

Fax: +44 1865 793137

Notes

  1. About SIRC, SIRC website, accessed June 23 2009
  2. Pusztai Published!, SIRC website, accessed 23 June 2009
  3. Annabel Ferriman, "An end to health scares?", BMJ, 11 September 1999, 319:716
  4. Annabel Ferriman, "An end to health scares?", BMJ, 11 September 1999, 319:716
  5. MCM Research, MCM Research website, accessed 23 June 2009
  6. Annabel Ferriman, "An end to health scares?", BMJ, 11 September 1999, 319:716
  7. Annabel Ferriman, "An end to health scares?", BMJ, 11 September 1999, 319:716