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Public attitudes to tree-breeding solutions to ash dieback

Alternative title:
2015 survey at UK countryside events
Documentation:
This data was generated from a face-to-face questionaire survey of people attending three countryside events in the UK during the summer of 2015. For full details of the methods please see Jepson, P & Arakelyan, I (in press) Developing publicly acceptable tree health policy: public perceptions of tree-breeding solutions to ash dieback among interested publics in the UK. Forest Policy and Economics The UK needs to develop effective policy responses to the spread of tree pathogens and pests. This has been given the political urgency following the media and other commentary associated with the arrival of a disease that causes ‘dieback’ of European Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) - a tree species with deep cultural associations. In 2014 the UK government published a plant biosecurity strategy and linked to this invested in research to inform policy. This paper reports the findings of a survey of informed UK publics on the acceptability of various potential strategies to deal with ash dieback, including “no action”. During the summer of 2015, we conducted a face-to-face survey of 1152 respondents attending three major countryside events that attract distinct publics interested in the countryside: landowners & land managers; naturalists and gardeners. We found that UK publics who are likely to engage discursively and politically (through letter writing, petitions etc.) with the issue of ash dieback a) care about the issue, b) want an active response, c) do not really distinguish between ash trees in forestry or ecological settings, and d) prefer traditional breeding solutions. Further that e) younger people and gardeners are open to GM breeding techniques, but f) the more policy-empowered naturalists are more likely to be anti-GM. We suggest that these findings provide three ‘steers’ for science and policy: 1) policy needs to include an active intervention component involving the breeding of disease-tolerant trees, 2) that the development of disease tolerance using GM-technologies could be part of a tree-breeding policy, and 3) there is a need for an active dialogue with publics to manage expectations on the extent to which science and policy can control tree disease or, put another way, to build acceptability for the prospect that tree diseases may have to run their course.

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Department:
Geography
Role:
Principal Investigator (PI), Creator


Publisher:
University of Oxford
Publication date:
2017
Spatial coverage:
England
DOI:
Data collected:
2015-07-31 - 2015-09-11


Language:
English
Keywords:
Subjects:
UUID:
uuid:d564a7d1-8d87-4800-8aa2-d24d82f50cf2
Deposit date:
2017-01-28

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