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Narrative policy framework at the macro level-cultural theory-based beliefs, science-based narrative strategies, and their uptake in the Canadian policy process for genetically modified salmon

Journal

PUBLIC POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 480-515

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09520767211065609

Keywords

Narrative policy framework; cultural theory; genetically modified food

Funding

  1. Genetic Engineering and Society (GES) Center of North Carolina State University
  2. Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Science and Society

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This study utilizes the Narrative Policy Framework (NPF) and cultural theory to analyze the use of policy narratives by coalitions and the institutional uptake. The findings reveal significant relationships between policy-stance, the cultural disposition of a policy narrative, the narrative strategies being used, and policy uptake. Final government documents referred more to narratives that contained the scope to science-only and expressed hierarchical or individualistic dispositions.
This study utilizes the Narrative Policy Framework (NPF) and cultural theory to examine the use of policy narratives by coalitions (meso-level) and the institutional uptake (macro-level). We analyze Parliamentary hearings about genetically modified (GM) salmon in Canada to associate narrative strategies with certain cultural worldviews and policy-stances. We explore narrative strategies used by cultural groups with regard to whether they contain the scope of GM salmon issues to science-only (direct health and environmental impacts) or expand the issues to science-plus (to include broader economic, social, or cultural impacts). Finally, we examine whether certain framings of GM salmon issues or specific cultural narratives are preferentially taken up in the final policy documents generated after the hearings. Our findings reveal significant relationships between policy-stance (pro-vs anti-GM), the cultural disposition of a policy narrative, the narrative strategies being used, and ultimately policy uptake. For example, narratives with hierarchical cultural dispositions were more likely to expand the scope of the issue to science-plus when supporting their own policy position (typically pro-GM) but contain the scope to science-only when refuting an anti-GM policy-stance. With regard to policy uptake, final government documents referred more to narratives that contained the scope to science-only and expressed hierarchical or individualistic dispositions in comparison to the hearings. This study has practical implications for understanding whose perspectives and arguments are legitimized in national policy debates about GM foods. It also extends NPF theory to how narratives containing specific cultural dispositions and risk-based framings influence policy uptake at the macro-level.

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