Title: Backlash of policy dismantling in the production of invisibility: when pesticides cease to be a public problem

Abstract: Bauer and Knill (2012, p. 35) define policy dismantling as “a change of direct, indirect, hidden, or symbolic nature that may decrease the number of policies in a particular area, reduce the number of instruments used, or reduce their intensity.” Brazil is one of the world’s largest consumers of pesticides, but their impacts on the population are still rarely recognised as a public problem. During the governments of Lula and Dilma, several social participation spaces were created to discuss this issue. In this article, we discuss how dismantling these spaces has contributed to producing invisibility regarding the impacts of pesticides. We were confronted with this issue when building a citizen observatory in the metropolitan region of Santarém, Pará, in partnership with family farmer unions. Based on interviews, participant observation, and focus groups, we analyse how the dismantling of pesticide regulation has occurred nationally and how it influenced the territorial level. Despite research showing the impacts of pesticides, the progressive dismantling of social participation spaces, such as the Regional Forum to Combat the Impacts of Pesticides in Santarém, has led to the invisibility of the impacts caused by their use. [Emilie Coudel et al. (2023). Backlash of policy dismantling in the production of invisibility: when pesticides cease to be a public problem. Brasília, v. 14, n.4, p. 99-116.]

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pesticide policy dismantling brazil 2023.pdf
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Article: WeedsNews6036 (permalink)
Categories: :WeedsNews:research alert, :WeedsNews:policy, :WeedsNews:pesticides
Date: 6 May 2023; 4:45:46 PM AEST

Author Name: David Low
Author ID: adminDavid