Food RisC – Perceptions and communication of food risks and benefits across Europe

Client:
European Commission
Start date:
July 2010
Due for completion:
June 2013

The purpose of this project is to identify and characterise food risk/benefit issues and the consequent implications for risk communicators across Europe. It will provide a systematic understanding of how consumers deal with information about risks and benefits relating to food, identifying key social-psychological and socio-demographic characteristics that affect perceptions, as well as preferred communication channels. The project will also identify the barriers to communicating with consumers across Europe and will make recommendations about the unique potential of new social media to communicate food risk/benefit information. These objectives will be achieved through a range of methods and novel approaches to extend the theoretical basis of how people will acquire and use information in food domains. This will include the development and use of an online deliberative tool, referred to as EnGauge, to evaluate expert generated communications about food risk and benefit. This phase of the work will build on a previous project entitled ‘Online deliberative engagement: a pilot study’, which tested the use of such a tool in allowing people to consider and respond to scientific information online.

The impact of the project will be at a European level, facilitated through the development of a ‘FoodRisC’ toolkit and practical guidance to enable the effective delivery of coherent messages about food risk/benefit across the Member states. Use of the toolkit and guides will assist policy makers, food authorities and other end users in the food supply chain, in developing common approaches to communicating messages on food risk/benefit to consumers. The effective communication of such information will assist initiatives aimed at reducing the burden of food related ill-health and the economic impact of food crises, and will help to ensure that consumer confidence in safe and nutritional food is fostered and maintained across Europe

Brook Lyndhurst was involved in the first year of the project, which will run for a further two years, until June 2013. For further information visit the FoodRisC website.
 

  • Online deliberative engagement: a pilot study

    This study for the Wellcome Trust tested an innovative online tool for engaging the public with a view to extending its use to projects dealing with complex biomedical science issues
  • EnGauge

    EnGauge is an internet-based, deliberative engagement tool that enables users to expose research subjects to a variety of information over time and to assess their understanding and responses to it.

Brook Lyndhurst Blog

  • Waste and the built environment

    Our economy is built on the transformation of raw materials into products and services. Until recently the waste produced as part of this process or at the end of this product’s life was seen as an unavoidable part of this process. However, global economic growth is putting rising pressure on depleting resources, leading to a [...] 

  • Lies, damned lies and food behaviours

    Ruth and David spoke last week at the SRA seminar “Lies, damned lies and food behaviours”. Chaired by Oxford academic Ceridwen Roberts, the event involved a presentation from Ruth and David (you can see the slides here) and a Q&A session with a small but perfectly formed audience. As frequently happens when presenting or discussing food [...] 

  • Open data open season

    As the Royal Statistical Society (RSS) reports on the latest pressure brought to bear on the Government’s Open Data initiative, signs of a thriving and well-resourced statistics and data-based movement abound. The UK Statistics Authority, with Andrew Dilmot now in the chair, have instructed the Office of National Statistics to ensure that all responses to [...]