
Coverage of organic agriculture in North American newspapers: Media: linking food safety, the environment, human health and organic agriculture
S. Cahill1, K. Morley1 and D. A. Powell2
Abstract
Purpose: The project explored the ways in which the topics of organic food and agriculture are discussed in representative North American media outlets in reference to food safety, environmental concerns, and human health.
Design/methodology/approach: Articles from five newspapers were collected and coded using the content analysis technique and analyzed for topic, tone, and theme.
Findings: For a six-year time period, 618 articles on organic food and organic agriculture are analyzed and the prominent topics are found to be genetic engineering, pesticides, and organic farming. Articles with a neutral tone with respect to organic agriculture and food accounted for 41.4 percent of the articles, while positively toned articles garnered 36.9 percent. The themes human health, food safety, and environmental concerns were discussed with positive reference to organic food and agriculture in 81, 50, and 90 percent, respectively, of comments pulled from the articles.
Practical implications: Analysis of these articles over time, between media outlets and by topic allows for understanding of media reporting on the subject and provides insight into the way the public is influenced by news coverage of organic food and agriculture.
Originality/value: Research that analyzes media coverage for how it portrays the topic of organic food and organic agriculture with respect to health, food safety, and environmental concern, and concludes that articles about organic production in the selected time period are seldom negative.
Source
British Food Journal (2010) 112: 710-722
DOI: 10.1108/00070701011058244
Author Locations and Affiliations
(1) Department of Plant Agriculture, University of Guelph, Ontario
(2)
Diagnostic Medicine/Pathobiology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas
en français
Posted September 2010