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How do you gather genuine public opinion on one of the most emotionally charged topics in recent political debate?
What does it take to present contested evidence to a jury of citizens in a fair and balanced way?
And how do you explain a robust but unfamiliar research method to journalists on deadline?
In this episode, Jay Stone (Nuffield Council on Bioethics) and Henrietta Hopkins (Hopkins Van Mill) talk about the 2024 citizens' jury on assisted dying and what it taught them about communicating complex public evidence at exactly the right moment.
Visit us at www.orinococomms.com | Contact me at [email protected] | Join our community and subscribe to our newsletter at orinococomms.substack.com | Tell us what you think bit.ly/orinoco-speakpipe_pod
By Orinoco CommunicationsHow do you gather genuine public opinion on one of the most emotionally charged topics in recent political debate?
What does it take to present contested evidence to a jury of citizens in a fair and balanced way?
And how do you explain a robust but unfamiliar research method to journalists on deadline?
In this episode, Jay Stone (Nuffield Council on Bioethics) and Henrietta Hopkins (Hopkins Van Mill) talk about the 2024 citizens' jury on assisted dying and what it taught them about communicating complex public evidence at exactly the right moment.
Visit us at www.orinococomms.com | Contact me at [email protected] | Join our community and subscribe to our newsletter at orinococomms.substack.com | Tell us what you think bit.ly/orinoco-speakpipe_pod