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Food, risk and politics
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01 April 2009

This is a book about the risk politics of food safety. Food-related risks regularly grab the headlines in ways that threaten reasoned debate and obstruct sensible policy making. In this book, Ed Randall explains why this is the case. He goes on to make the case for a properly informed and fully open public debate about food safety issues. He argues that this is the true antidote to the politics of scare, scandal and crisis.
The book skilfully weaves together the many different threads of food safety and risk politics and offers a particularly rewarding read for academics and students in the fields of politics and media studies. It will also appeal to scholars from other disciplines, particularly social psychology and the food sciences. The book is a lively and exceptionally readable account of food safety and risk politics that will engage policy makers and the general reader. It promises to help us all manage food safety issues more intelligently and successfully.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General, Cultural studies, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Agriculture & Food Policy (see also SOCIAL SCIENCE / Agriculture & Food), SOCIAL SCIENCE / Agriculture & Food (see also POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Agriculture & Food Policy), Central / national / federal government policies
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Salmonella and media intrusion: food safety policy and politics upset
3. An inspector calls: Pennington, E. coli and disaster science
4. BSE and vCJD – still crazy after all these years
5. GMOs and food – is anyone listening?
6. Dioxin – scares without borders
7. Foot and mouth disease – who’s panicking now?
8. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index