Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media

The emergence of palm oil as the world's most produced and consumed vegetable oil has prompted various policy initiatives to help govern the industry in a sustainable manner. These initiatives include transnational sustainable certification schemes, such as the Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), and national level sustainability standards, such as Malaysian Sustainable Palm Oil. To date, attempts to find consensus on sustainable policy and processes has been characterised by tension and disagreement. Most notably, stakeholders participating in policy dialogue from producing countries are unsatisfied with the outcomes of transnational palm oil governance. Tension stems from observations that sustainability is understood differently in the palm oil producing countries of the Global South compared with Northern consumption markets. To understand the different framings of palm oil and potential governance solutions, we investigate media coverage of palm oil sustainability in two different countries: the Netherlands – the largest importer of palm oil in Europe – and Malaysia – the second largest exporter of palm oil in the world after Indonesia. From a sample of 397 Malaysian and Dutch newspaper articles between 2000 and 2015, we employ framing analysis to examine the similarities and differences in media representations of palm oil sustainability. Our findings reveal considerable differences in the way palm oil sustainability is framed in the two countries. Malaysian media frame palm oil as a sustainable industry yet underpinned by a distrust towards transnational sustainability governance (e.g. RSPO) and a perception of unfair treatment towards producing countries by the West. Conversely, Dutch media frame the West as proud consumers of palm oil, who are driving up sustainability standards through NGO scrutiny and participation in transnational processes. We argue that a comparative analysis of media frames offers instructive insights for understanding processes of transnational sustainability governance. In particular, we posit that reconciling policy tensions between North and South palm oil stakeholders could be achieved by highlighting the differences in sustainability framings at different points in the value chain to identify contestation and consensus.

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Main Authors: Schouten, Greetje, Padfield, Rory, Kraamwinkel, Duif
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Framing, Malaysia, Media analysis, Palm oil, Sustainability, The Netherlands,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/contested-representations-a-comparative-analysis-of-palm-oil-sust
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6314722024-10-02 Schouten, Greetje Padfield, Rory Kraamwinkel, Duif Article/Letter to editor World Development Sustainability 3 (2023) ISSN: 2772-655X Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media 2023 The emergence of palm oil as the world's most produced and consumed vegetable oil has prompted various policy initiatives to help govern the industry in a sustainable manner. These initiatives include transnational sustainable certification schemes, such as the Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), and national level sustainability standards, such as Malaysian Sustainable Palm Oil. To date, attempts to find consensus on sustainable policy and processes has been characterised by tension and disagreement. Most notably, stakeholders participating in policy dialogue from producing countries are unsatisfied with the outcomes of transnational palm oil governance. Tension stems from observations that sustainability is understood differently in the palm oil producing countries of the Global South compared with Northern consumption markets. To understand the different framings of palm oil and potential governance solutions, we investigate media coverage of palm oil sustainability in two different countries: the Netherlands – the largest importer of palm oil in Europe – and Malaysia – the second largest exporter of palm oil in the world after Indonesia. From a sample of 397 Malaysian and Dutch newspaper articles between 2000 and 2015, we employ framing analysis to examine the similarities and differences in media representations of palm oil sustainability. Our findings reveal considerable differences in the way palm oil sustainability is framed in the two countries. Malaysian media frame palm oil as a sustainable industry yet underpinned by a distrust towards transnational sustainability governance (e.g. RSPO) and a perception of unfair treatment towards producing countries by the West. Conversely, Dutch media frame the West as proud consumers of palm oil, who are driving up sustainability standards through NGO scrutiny and participation in transnational processes. We argue that a comparative analysis of media frames offers instructive insights for understanding processes of transnational sustainability governance. In particular, we posit that reconciling policy tensions between North and South palm oil stakeholders could be achieved by highlighting the differences in sustainability framings at different points in the value chain to identify contestation and consensus. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/contested-representations-a-comparative-analysis-of-palm-oil-sust 10.1016/j.wds.2023.100075 https://edepot.wur.nl/661165 Framing Malaysia Media analysis Palm oil Sustainability The Netherlands https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Framing
Malaysia
Media analysis
Palm oil
Sustainability
The Netherlands
Framing
Malaysia
Media analysis
Palm oil
Sustainability
The Netherlands
spellingShingle Framing
Malaysia
Media analysis
Palm oil
Sustainability
The Netherlands
Framing
Malaysia
Media analysis
Palm oil
Sustainability
The Netherlands
Schouten, Greetje
Padfield, Rory
Kraamwinkel, Duif
Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media
description The emergence of palm oil as the world's most produced and consumed vegetable oil has prompted various policy initiatives to help govern the industry in a sustainable manner. These initiatives include transnational sustainable certification schemes, such as the Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), and national level sustainability standards, such as Malaysian Sustainable Palm Oil. To date, attempts to find consensus on sustainable policy and processes has been characterised by tension and disagreement. Most notably, stakeholders participating in policy dialogue from producing countries are unsatisfied with the outcomes of transnational palm oil governance. Tension stems from observations that sustainability is understood differently in the palm oil producing countries of the Global South compared with Northern consumption markets. To understand the different framings of palm oil and potential governance solutions, we investigate media coverage of palm oil sustainability in two different countries: the Netherlands – the largest importer of palm oil in Europe – and Malaysia – the second largest exporter of palm oil in the world after Indonesia. From a sample of 397 Malaysian and Dutch newspaper articles between 2000 and 2015, we employ framing analysis to examine the similarities and differences in media representations of palm oil sustainability. Our findings reveal considerable differences in the way palm oil sustainability is framed in the two countries. Malaysian media frame palm oil as a sustainable industry yet underpinned by a distrust towards transnational sustainability governance (e.g. RSPO) and a perception of unfair treatment towards producing countries by the West. Conversely, Dutch media frame the West as proud consumers of palm oil, who are driving up sustainability standards through NGO scrutiny and participation in transnational processes. We argue that a comparative analysis of media frames offers instructive insights for understanding processes of transnational sustainability governance. In particular, we posit that reconciling policy tensions between North and South palm oil stakeholders could be achieved by highlighting the differences in sustainability framings at different points in the value chain to identify contestation and consensus.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Framing
Malaysia
Media analysis
Palm oil
Sustainability
The Netherlands
author Schouten, Greetje
Padfield, Rory
Kraamwinkel, Duif
author_facet Schouten, Greetje
Padfield, Rory
Kraamwinkel, Duif
author_sort Schouten, Greetje
title Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media
title_short Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media
title_full Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media
title_fullStr Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media
title_full_unstemmed Contested representations : A comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in Malaysian and Dutch media
title_sort contested representations : a comparative analysis of palm oil sustainability in malaysian and dutch media
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/contested-representations-a-comparative-analysis-of-palm-oil-sust
work_keys_str_mv AT schoutengreetje contestedrepresentationsacomparativeanalysisofpalmoilsustainabilityinmalaysiananddutchmedia
AT padfieldrory contestedrepresentationsacomparativeanalysisofpalmoilsustainabilityinmalaysiananddutchmedia
AT kraamwinkelduif contestedrepresentationsacomparativeanalysisofpalmoilsustainabilityinmalaysiananddutchmedia
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