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Special PresentationsProduct and environment: quality and public health F7Meier-Ploeger, A., Vogtmann, H. |
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When the term quality is used with respect to
food a value judgement is made. The partners on the market, producers, processors,
legislators and medical doctors or consumers might have different judgements about the
value of a special food. Food and health policy and/or environmental problems may change
their viewpoints quite rapidly. As a consequence of the various food scandals in recent
years, the increasing public awareness for environmental problems in general has focused
on the matter of food quality in particular. The consequence of this awareness is a wider
definition of food quality, as frequently used by scientists today. The evaluation of food quality by taking into account exclusively these criteria is not satisfying. Today we have to add ethical criteria such as the environmental, social and political dimensions of food production, processing and packaging. Therefore new methods for the evaluation of the total range of parameters have to be developed. In the last few years some active steps haven been taken with the eco balance sheets or consumer shopping guides Shopping for a better world" reflecting socially responsible supermarket shopping (CEP, 1992). The eco-balance sheet looks at the total route of food production from the field to the shelf in the shop, evaluating the ecological relevance of the production in relation to soil, water, air and non-renewable resources. A new movement in food and nutrition sciences, nutrition ecology, is trying to establish a more holistic view of food quality by not only describing food properties such as appearance etc. but also the influence of food production, processing and packaging on humans, social structure and environmental issues. |
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