“…Previous research tends to focus on individual-level explanations, identifying several demographic and ideological predictors of risk concern, for example gender, education, perceived control, and institutional trust (Siegrist and Cvetkovich 2000;Slovic 1987). Less research investigates contextual influences on risk perception, but qualitative studies suggest that the structure of food provisioning systems, divisions of regulatory authority, and media coverage could contribute to national variations by shaping public expectations about risk management (Berg et al 2005;Kjaernes, Harvey, and Warde 2007). Much of this research examines only a handful of countries, however, raising questions about generalizability.…”