Blog: Collective Disease Incorporated
by Lapis

GMO Documentary Blocked

The corporate elite have many ways of making sure that they (and their unethical methods of profiteering) are not found out. COntrolling meddia is but one avenue. Another important one is by pressuring universities (grant money, etc).

Date:   9/21/2005 1:34:16 AM   ( 19 y ) ... viewed 1229 times

Canadian Filmmaker-Activists Stir up GMO Battle

Free Press

Video sows seeds of controversy
GM grain film blocked by U of M: researchers

Mon Sep 12 2005

By Helen Fallding

TWO researchers accuse the University of Manitoba of blocking for three years the release of their video exploring the risks of genetically modified crops, while at the same courting funds from biotech
companies.

The case is being compared to a University of Toronto scandal over the suppression of drug research concerns.

University of Manitoba environment professor Stéphane McLachlan and his PhD student Ian Mauro completed a feature-length documentary in 2002 with help from independent Winnipeg filmmaker Jim Sanders.

It is based on interviews with Prairie farmers about their experiences
-- good and bad -- with genetically-modified canola.

But the Seeds of Change video has never been screened because the university and the researchers, who share the copyright, have been unable to negotiate an agreement on its release. "We've had people knocking on our door wanting this," said Mauro, citing interest from Denmark, Australia and the U.S.

The university originally demanded assurances it would not be liable if anyone sued. One insurer demanded a $50,000 deductible for any lawsuits by crop marketer Monsanto, which has a reputation for protecting its interests vigorously through the courts.

The company is featured in the documentary because of its legal battle with Saskatchewan farmer Percy Schmeiser and its development of genetically-modified wheat.

'Never seen (the video)' "Obviously, we've never seen (the video), so I'm not sure how these guys could assume that we would sue them," Monsanto Canada spokeswoman Trish Jordan said.

Now that a private investor has pulled out of the Seeds of Change project and the filmmakers have made it clear they don't intend to make a profit, the lawsuit issue has apparently been dropped by the university. "I've seen (the video) and I think it's fair. It's not a biased kind of thing," said Alan Simms, who represented the university in early negotiations before going on to head the university's Smartpark research complex.

Simms said preliminary negotiations with Monsanto Canada over moving its Canadian headquarters to a new $6.5-million building in Smartpark did not begin until after his involvement with the documentary issue ended.

But McLachlan said the university is still demanding control over where and when the video is shown, while at the same time requiring a disclaimer indicating the project has nothing to do with the university. An independent lawyer advised him not to sign the agreement the university proposed.

University spokesman John Danakas would not say what restrictions the university would place on how the video is screened, because those details have not yet been discussed with the researchers. The university wants to make sure the documentary is only used for educational purposes, he said.

Filed grievance McLachlan has filed a grievance through the faculty association claiming the university is infringing on his academic freedom -- and even his responsibility as a public servant -- to disseminate his research results as he sees fit.

If he and Mauro wrote a book about their interviews with the farmers, or even published the documentary transcript, the university administration would have no say. But a university copyright bylaw originally written to govern the use of taped lectures says the university has 50 per cent ownership of video and audio recordings by staff.

University of Manitoba ethics professor Arthur Schafer noted that universities are sometimes reluctant to offend corporate donors who compensate for government underfunding.

But Danakas said the lengthy negotiations over the video have more to do with the complexities of new media and the involvement of an outside filmmaker. Sanders, meanwhile, is tired of waiting for permission to release the increasingly dated video.

In an article in the current issue of Canadian Dimension magazine, the independent filmmaker promised to put the documentary on his website for free download next month.

The Canadian Association of University Teachers has also taken up the case and plans to help McLachlan release the video in Winnipeg this fall -- with or without the university's permission. The professor recently received tenure, which gives him job security he did not have when negotiations with the university began.

CAUT executive director James Turk compared the case to the University of Toronto's failure to support Dr. Nancy Olivieri when drug company Apotex tried to prevent her from going public with her concerns about one of their drugs. The company was also negotiating with the university over a huge donation.

Turk said stalling by the university amounts to suppression of research-based discussion of a compelling public issue -- the very reason universities exist.

Equally vigilant "We hope this never happens to another researcher."

He said the association would be equally vigilant if the documentary focused on the benefits of genetically-modified crops.

Mauro said he has spent more time fighting to get the video released than he did interviewing farmers. The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, which helped fund the documentary, encourages researchers to disseminate their work in a format accessible to the general public and has raised no objection to Seeds of Change. helen.fallding@freepress.mb.ca

Video summary

Seeds of Change: Farmers, Biotechnology and the New Face of Agriculture

Summary: The video documentary explores the impacts genetically modified canola is having on farmers and rural communities in the Canadian Prairies, outlining benefits, but paying special attention to the risks. The voices of farmers have sometimes been missing in the public debate between anti-GM activists and the biotech industry. Scientists critical of GM crops are interviewed, including activist David Suzuki, University of Guelph professor Anne Clark and Indian activist Vandana Shiva. Patrick Moore, a former Greenpeace activist turned advocate for GM crops, also appears in the film. Monsanto, one of the main marketers of genetically modified crops, declined to participate in the project.

Date: The documentary was completed in 2002, but has not yet been released.

Length: 70 minutes

Budget: Less than $200,000, including grants from the federal Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and the Manitoba Rural Adaptation Council.

Created by: University of Manitoba PhD student Ian Mauro, independent Winnipeg filmmaker Jim Sanders and University of Manitoba professor Stéphane McLachlan. Other films by activist filmmaker Sanders include
The Real Thing: Coca, Democracy and Rebellion in Bolivia, which screened last year at Cinematheque.

Benefits of genetically-modified crops mentioned in the video: yield increases, profitability, better weed control, reduced tillage and fuel savings.

Risks highlighted: contamination of non-GM seed, GM crops as weeds in other fields, resistance to herbicides, loss of markets in Europe, lawsuits against farmers for patent violations, impact on zero-till agriculture and organic farming. Similar issues were raised in an award-winning Free Press series on genetically-modified wheat in 2002.

Excerpt: "You have the extreme groups on the anti-GMO. You also have big business, which I don't trust all the time -- or ever -- telling you something else on the other side. We're stuck in the middle." (Farmer from Starbuck, Manitoba.)

Potential audience: farmers, academic conferences, agriculture policy makers, film festivals and alternative theatres. The potential for international distribution is limited now that independent funder Angband has pulled out following delays in releasing the video.




Add This Entry To Your CureZone Favorites!

Print this page
Email this page
DISCLAIMER / WARNING   Alert Webmaster


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with https://www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - Advertise - Stats

Copyright 1999 - 2024  www.curezone.org

0.047 sec, (2)

Back to blog!
 
Add Blog To Favorites!
 
Add This Entry To Favorites!

Comments (25 of 284):
Re: CIA Fakes Karlin 5 y
Re: Canadian Tortu… lying… 14 y
Re: V For Vendetta popoe 17 y
BRAVO! Nexus Magaz… #5058… 17 y
LAPIS, nice to see… #5058… 17 y
Fintan Dunne... #50585 17 y
relevant vibr8 17 y
Great article!! 2dreem 18 y
Check this link out #3922 18 y
Google video rudenski 18 y
Re: Is Fintan Dunn… Lapis 18 y
Is Fintan Dunne Al… white… 18 y
Some good facts an… kermi… 18 y
Re: Yes, but... Lapis 18 y
Re: Yes, but... JeSuisBut… 18 y
Re: Yes, but... #18637 18 y
Re: Yes, but... Lapis 18 y
Yes, but... JeSuisButterf… 18 y
Re: Yikes!! Lapis 18 y
Yikes!! JeSuisButterfly 18 y
Re: Frog Soup Lapis 18 y
Re: Frog Soup rudenski 18 y
Frog Soup Lapis 18 y
Hermann Goering rudenski 18 y
From Traka zeppy 18 y
All Comments (284)

Blog Entries (6 of 372):
GMO Documentary Blocked  19 y
Non-sustainable Food Product…  19 y
Science Under Siege  19 y
Iraq: Oil & Blood  19 y R
9/11...What Happened?  19 y
Corporation Status Problem  19 y R
All Entries (372)

Blogs by Lapis (9):
One  18 y  (384)
In The Raw  18 y  (269)
Resonance: "a vibrational col…  18 y  (144)
Alternative Health (A to Z)  18 y  (46)
Pharma Watch  18 y  (38)
Energy Healing  18 y  (33)
Mentors  19 y  (5)
Project Creator  18 y  (4)
Recommended Books And Websites  19 y  (1)

Similar Blogs (10 of 185):
NSA Storage  by NSA Storage  17 d
Should you trust pl…  by marceles  19 d
Buy Hydrocodone Onl…  by aurorawright  56 d
prposting  by Kirik  89 d
Son of Truth of Self  by Chef JeM  6 mon
My Enchanted Garden…  by Chef JeM  7 mon
ABCs of Conscious E…  by luckman  8 mon
Personal blog  by maxdigi  9 mon
Matrimonial services  by karandeep  10 mon
Photographer   by Photographer2  10 mon
All Blogs (1,019)

Back to blog!
 

Hulda Clark Parasites Cleanse
Hulda Clark Parasites Cleanse