The Scientists Have Betrayed Us! The Effects of Anti-Science Communication on Negative Perceptions Toward the Scientific Community

Authors

  • Michael Hameleers University of Amsterdam Assistant Professor, Political Communication at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research
  • Toni G. L. A. Van der Meer University of Amsterdam Assistant Professor, Political Communication at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research

Keywords:

anti-science populism, blame attribution, climate change, conspiracy theories, disinformation, populism, post-truth politics

Abstract

In today’s digitized media ecologies, anti-science beliefs and deliberate attacks on the legitimacy of experts and empirical evidence are getting more widespread. Blaming scientific elites may be an important populist communication tactic used to fuel disenchantment and cynicism toward scientists regarded as part of the “corrupt” elite. To investigate the effects of different blame attributions to scientific elites, we rely on experimental data collected among a representative sample of Dutch citizens (N = 475). We randomly exposed people to populist versus nonpopulist blame attributions to scientific elites, or conspiracies in which different elite actors were accused of secretly collaborating to manipulate and mislead the people. Our findings show that, under some conditions, anti-science communication negatively affects evaluations of scientists. By demonstrating the impact of anti-science populism, we show how the public’s opposition to expert knowledge and the rejection of truthful information may be fueled by blaming scientists.

Author Biographies

Michael Hameleers, University of Amsterdam Assistant Professor, Political Communication at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research

Dr. Michael Hameleers (PhD, University of Amsterdam) is an Assistant Professor of Political Communication at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR). His research interests include (right-wing) populism, disinformation, and selective exposure. e-mail address: m.hameleers@uva.nl

Toni G. L. A. Van der Meer, University of Amsterdam Assistant Professor, Political Communication at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research

Dr. Toni G. L. A. van der Meer is an assistant professor at the Department of Corporate Communication of ASCoR, University of Amsterdam. His dissertation focused on the communicative interplay between the organization, news media, and the public in times of crisis. After his PhD, Toni has continued his line of research in crisis communication and published on negativity (bias) in the media, selective exposure and misinformation.

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Published

2021-10-29

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Articles