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ACDC News
Issue 05-1, January, 2005
Happy New Year and welcome to this first
2005 issue of news from the Agricultural Communications Documentation
Center. If you are new to ACDC News we hope you find it interesting and
useful.
The ACDC collection topped the 27,000-document
mark on January 3. It keeps growing in size - and in value to professionals,
teachers, researchers, students and others interested in communications,
as related to agriculture, food, natural resources and rural matters,
globally. The amount of such information "out there" continues
to surprise, inspire and challenge us.
"Deep" subject indexing adds
power to your scouting.
- Want to monitor attitudes? More than 2,400 documents provide survey
results about attitudes of consumers, farmers, journalists, scientists
and others regarding agricultural biotechnology, food irradiation, environment,
animal rights, nutrition labeling, livestock diseases and other issues.
To identify them: On the Database Search page of this ACDC web site,
use a Subject search on the term "attitude"
- Interested in effective rural-urban interactions? You can identify
more than 500 documents about this subject in the ACDC collection. Use
a Subject search on the term "rural-urban communication
- Want updates on the information sources of farmers, extension workers,
agricultural reporters and others? To identify more than 1,100 documents
about that topic use a Subject search on "information sources"
- Interested in "farm journals" (more than 1,100 documents),
rural "radio" (more than 1,700 documents), agriculture-related
"advertising" (more than 1,800 documents), "media effectiveness"
(more than 1,300 documents) or agriculture-related uses of the "Internet"
(more than 500 documents)? Use Subject searches on terms within the
quotation marks above.
Some recent documents in the ACDC collection are available online, in
full text. However, most materials are not. If you lack local access to
documents that interest you, contact us by e-mail at docctr@library.uiuc.edu
and we will help. All are available here.
Following are a few samples of documents added recently to the ACDC collection:
Will agricultural e-commerce lead to
greater openness and competition? An analysis of the ornamental horticulture
industry has led to a conclusion that "it is still far too early
to predict." This case study reported in a 2004 book, The ICT Revolution,
examined the $7.7 billion global trade in cut flowers, foliage and plants.
Authors reported that interest so far in a new business model using the
present distribution chain streamlined by the Internet is "scant."
Few buyers have signed up for online auctions, they found. Arranging lines
of credit, foreign exchange, and insurance at various auctions - necessary
for selling online - has proven time-consuming and costly.
"If the physical chain, with its interdependency, remains dominant
and e-commerce only intensified pre-existing developments in the industry,
the barriers that producers in developing countries have to surmount to
directly access consumers remain staggering."
Reference: ICT revolution
Author: Cohen, Daniel
Coming scandal in organic foods.
"Look out for coming scandal in surging organic foods," read
the headline of an Advertising Age column - 34 years ago. In December
1971, columnist E.B. Weiss predicted a chain of events leading to regulations
whereby "organic farms will be certified and inspected regularly.
There will be regs in packaging and marketing."
Reference: Look out for coming scandal in surging organic foods
Author: Weiss, E.B.
U.S. organic farmers are dissatisfied
with the extension service. That message appeared in a 2003 journal
article about responses to a national survey among U.S. organic farmers.
Demand for organic information is growing rapidly, but organic producers
(63% of whom are full-time farmers) are finding limited help from extension.
They "probably know more than the local extension advisor about
the agroecology determining the success or failure of the organic system."
Authors urged extension to support on-farm experimentation, help producers
monitor organic regulations, aid farmer-to-farmer interaction and test
farm-based theories in scientifically rigorous settings.
PDF posted at:http://agecon.lib.umn.edu/cgi-bin/pdf_view.pl?paperid=6547&ftype=.pdf
ACDC Reference: Improving
extension effectiveness for organic clients
Authors: Lohr, Luanne
Information issues in the "deskilling"
of farmers. Anthropologists are noting concerns seldom heard in discussions
about the effects of agricultural biotechnology. These concerns strike
close to the interests of communicators.
"American history shows how closely agri-biotechnology can be
linked to farmer deskilling," noted Glenn Davis Stone in a Current
Anthropology article. "
research is needed on how agricultural
biotechnologies may already have caused deskilling and how information
flow may be further impeded with genetically modified seeds."
PDF posted at: http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/research/BothSidesNow.pdf
ACDC Reference: Both sides now: fallacies in the genetic-modification
wars
Author: Stone, Glenn Davis
Who's going to pay? Will I have a voice?
Will my data be kept confidential? These questions reflect major concerns
of U.S. livestock producers about the lively topic of animal identification.
Results emerged from a recent survey about the National Animal Identification
System being implemented by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and state
animal health agencies. Specifically, producers registered these as
biggest concerns:
Funding 20 percent
Producer participation 17
Data confidentiality 15
Data collection and housing 11
Reference: Confidentiality and data housing
Posted @ http://www.animalagriculture.org/headline/2004NR/NR_NAISSurvey_Nov8.htm
.
Encouraging words we appreciate.
Thanks to all who shared with us reactions such as these during recent
months:
"Thank you for your prompt help."
"Congratulations! Your website looks wonderful."
"Good issue, as usual - and liked the profiles on people who
have been contributing."
"The books you suggested were wonderful."
"I am grateful for your kind reply. I am going to explore the
option you suggested."
"Your service is a wonderful outlet for grad students like myself."
Communicator activities approaching
February 1, 2005
Deadline for electronic submissions of research papers to be presented
at the
Association for Communication Excellence in Agriculture, Natural Resources,
and Life and Human Sciences (ACE), San Antonio, Texas, May 31-June 4,
2005.
Information by e-mail: david.doerfert@ttu.edu
February 5-9, 2005
Agricultural Communication Section, annual meeting of the Southern Association
of Agricultural Scientists (SAAS), Little Rock, Arkansas.
Information: www.saasinc.org
Please let us know if you would rather not receive
ACDC News. As Year 2005 begins we want to tell you how much we
appreciate your interest in this free e-newsletter. We hope it is
helpful, interesting and convenient for you. However, we do not want
to send something to you that you would rather not receive. So at
any time please let us know if you would like to be removed from the
list. You can do so by contacting us here at the Documentation Center:
docctr@library.uiuc.edu
Other possible subscribers you
might suggest? Let us know of - or refer us to - associates or other
persons you think might like to receive future issues of ACDC News through
our free online mailings of it.
Best regards and good searching.
Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for ACDC. Feel
free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest
(or send) agricultural communications documents we might add to this
unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to
Ag Com Documentation Center,
510 LIAC, 1101 S.
Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801)
or electronic form (at docctr@library.uiuc.edu
)
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