Brazil’s Popular Press Has Also Room for Science

Popular Brazilian daily O Dia, from Rio de Janeiro Science is a major topic in Brazilian newspapers aimed at low-income social classes, along with football and crime, according to a new study. Research released March 26 analyzed coverage in the newspapers Extra – which has one of the biggest circulations on Sundays in Brazil at 428,000 copies – and O Dia, which sells 238,000 copies on Sundays. 

The research was conducted by science journalist Wagner Barbosa de Oliveira as part of his masters thesis at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

He found that during a six-month period between 2005 and 2006, science stories appeared on 73.8% of days analyzed.  Furthermore, 86% of these stories were published in highly visible areas, such as the top or middle of the page.

Journalists preferred to write about health issues, which represented 54.2% of the total. Only three in ten stories were related to research in Brazil.

Oliveira praised their use of reliable sources of information.

"A third of the stories explicitly mention universities and research centers as a source, and peer-review journals, even in English, are mentioned as sources in 13.9% of the cases," he said.

However, Oliveira criticized the extent to which science stories were sensationalized, and also that science is presented as an established truth – mirroring common practices in newspapers targeting more elite audiences.

The study also shows that scientists do not write for newspapers aimed at the low-income classes. "This is a sign of the low importance given to popular newspapers by scientists – which is a mistake in my opinion, since they are not considering that low-income classes are 80% of the country's population," he said.

Oliveira, who works for the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, believes that fostering an increased involvement of scientists in this sort of media could help deliver the message that science is an important issue for Brazil's development.

Oliveira says his main reason for carrying out the study was the relevance of the mass media as one of the most important sources of information on science and technology for lay audiences in developing countries.

Often in developing countries, a significant amount of the population will have completed only part of formal education, or not have attended school at all.

SciDev.Net

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Migrants on Way to the US Among Killed in Mexico’s Drug Gang Massacre

The Ministry of Foreign Relations of Brazil has received word from the Mexican government ...

Brazil’s Central Bank Worried About Higher than Expected Inflation

In the minutes published today of the Central Bank Monetary Policy Committee’s (COPOM) most ...

Brazil Heading to Russia on a Business Trip

Vice president José Alencar leaves for Moscow today at the head of a mission ...

Brazil to Impose Bans on Chinese Products

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will sign, on the next days, two ...

Brazil: Bankruptcy-Plagued Varig Hires US Firm Savvy on Distressed Airlines

Global professional services firm Alvarez & Marsal, which specializes in turnarounds and restructurings, announced ...

Brazil Grows Close to 10% in 10 Years to 186 Million

Besides being the largest country in territory in Latin America Brazil also has the ...

From Republic to Empire

Our futurologist in residence peers into the future and reveals how everything goes wrong ...

Brazil Cabinet: The Fall of a Dreamer and a Doer

Following his resignation, Brazil’s former Education Minister Cristovam Buarque, claimed he had been isolated ...

Brazil’s New OAS Ambassador Wants a More Socially Active Organization

Ambassador Osmar Vladimir Chohfi today presented credentials as the new Permanent Representative of Brazil ...

Guimarães Rosa’s Sarapalha – In Portuguese

The malaria stayed. The residents, they were the ones who went away: the first ...