首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


Food risk management quality: Consumer evaluations of past and emerging food safety incidents
Authors:Ellen van Kleef  ?ydis Ueland  Gregory Theodoridis  Gene Rowe  Uwe Pfenning  Julie Houghton
Institution:1. Wageningen University, Marketing &2. Consumer Behaviour Group , Hollandseweg 1, Wageningen, 6706 KN, Netherlands;3. Matforsk , Osloveien 1, N-1430, ?s, Norway;4. Laboratory of Agribusiness Management , Agricultural University of Athens , 75, Iera Odos, GR-11855, Athens, Greece;5. Institute of Food Research, Consumer Science, Norwich Research Park , Norwich, NR4 7UA, UK;6. Dialogik GmbH , Seidenstr. 36, 70174, Stuttgart, Germany
Abstract:In European countries, there has been growing consumer distrust regarding the motives of food safety regulators and other actors in the food chain, partly as a result of recent food safety incidents. If consumer confidence in food safety is to be improved, a systematic understanding of what consumers perceive to be best practice in risk management is crucial. Previous qualitative and quantitative research has revealed underlying factors determining consumer perceptions of food risk management quality. The aim of the current case studies is to provide ‘proof of principles’ of these different factors against historic and emerging food safety incidents. Participants in four countries were questioned about country specific case studies, guided by the earlier findings regarding factors that determine perceived good practice in food risk management. In each country, two food safety incidents were selected. Semi-structured interviews with at least 25 participants per case study were conducted in Germany (BSE; nematode worms in fish), Greece (mould in Greek yogurt/carcinogenic honey crisis; avian influenza), Norway (E. coli in meat; contaminants in Norwegian salmon) and the UK (BSE; contaminants in Scottish salmon). The results generally confirm the importance of the previously identified factors, which help to explain relative perceptions of well and poorly managed incidents. Differences and similarities across countries and cases are detailed, and implications for future efforts to communicate about risk management are drawn.
Keywords:food safety  consumer evaluations  food risk management  trust  food safety incidents
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号