BBC gives too much weight to fringe views on issues such as climate change
By IAN SAMPLE - GUARDIAN.CO.UK
Added: Thu, 21 Jul 2011 12:46:04 UTC
Thanks to weavehole for the link
A review of the BBC's science coverage has concluded that its drive for impartiality lends too much credence to maverick views on MMR, climate change and GM
Gavin Esler was criticised in the review for being soft on climate sceptics in an interview on BBC2's Newsnight. Photograph: PA
The BBC is to revamp its science coverage after an independent review highlighted weaknesses and concluded that journalists boosted the apparent controversy of scientific news stories such as climate change, GM crops and the MMR vaccine by giving too much weight to fringe scientific viewpoints.
The wide-ranging review found the network's science reporting was generally of high quality, and praised the BBC for its breadth, depth and accuracy, but urged the broadcaster to tackle several areas of concern.
Commissioned last year to assess impartiality and accuracy in BBC science coverage across television, radio and the internet, the review said the network was at times so determined to be impartial that it put fringe views on a par with well-established fact: a strategy that made some scientific debates appear more controversial than they were.
The criticism was particularly relevant to stories on issues such as global warming, GM and the MMR vaccine, where minority views were sometimes given equal weighting to broad scientific consensus, creating what the report describes as "false balance".
Read more
Tweet
RELATED CONTENT
No blood on the carpet. How...
Richard Dawkins - RichardDawkins.net 173 Comments
[Journalists] seem to feel let down when they discover that the real people aren't anything like the way they so relentlessly portray us; as if, since they've gone to the trouble of inventing extravagant caricatures of us, we should at least have the decency to live up to them in real life.
Also in Polish
Q&A: Pell vs Dawkins - April 9, Easter...
David Knox - TV tonight - Australia 141 Comments

On Easter Monday night Q & A will host a two-man debate between Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell and outspoken, British atheist Richard Dawkins.
'Gay cure' group's London bus adverts...
- - BBC Comments
An advertising campaign backed by a Christian group which has been described as anti-gay has been pulled from London buses.
Why Richard Dawkins is still an atheist
Paula Kirby - Washington Post On Faith 108 Comments
[The God Delusion is] absolutely chock-full of things Richard Dawkins really does believe. Which is handy, because it saves everyone the trouble of making them up.
A brutal price still paid for daring to...
Amol Rajan - The Independent 39 Comments
Their assault illustrates the extent to which defenders of religion still dominate our press, the brutal retaliation exacted on clever opponents of faith and the incorrigible stupidity of Sayeeda Warsi's claim about "militant secularism" last week.
The world has forgotten the real...
Michael Hanlon - The Telegraph 33 Comments
At one point, governments in Europe, including ours, were offering to fly expats home from places where the radiation levels were lower than the natural background count in Aberdeen or Cornwall.
MORE BY IAN SAMPLE
Higgs boson hunters scent their elusive...
Ian Sample - The Guardian 25 Comments
Scientists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) are widely expected to announce evidence of the Higgs boson on Tuesday
Male deep-sea squid seeks mate of...
Ian Sample - The Guardian 11 Comments
The male of the species has adopted a sexual strategy to suit the conditions: it mates with any deep sea squid it comes across.
Prince Charles branded a 'snake oil...
Ian Sample - guardian.co.uk 50 Comments
Law could bury ancient secrets for ever
Ian Sample - Guardian 55 Comments
Chimps' emotional response to death...
Ian Sample - guardian.co.uk 50 Comments




















Comments
Comment RSS Feed
Please sign in or register to comment
View Comments Page