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Risk Management and Quality Assurance through the Food Supply Chain – Case Studies in the Swedish Food Industry

Olsson, Annika LU orcid and Skjöldebrand, Christina LU (2008) In Open Food Science Journal 2. p.49-56
Abstract
Processed food and eating out of the home are increasing phenomena, which presents new business opportunities for food manufacturers. However, the new food products require increased quality and safety, and thereby a more controlled distribution. The overall purpose of the research presented in this article is to describe the food supply chain from a critical context point of view in order to highlight the risks and the traceability issues. The paper expands previous discussions regarding critical control points into a critical context perspective in traceability in food supply chains. The initial part of the study is based on a literature review in the area of traceability combined with a number of related search words. A number of case... (More)
Processed food and eating out of the home are increasing phenomena, which presents new business opportunities for food manufacturers. However, the new food products require increased quality and safety, and thereby a more controlled distribution. The overall purpose of the research presented in this article is to describe the food supply chain from a critical context point of view in order to highlight the risks and the traceability issues. The paper expands previous discussions regarding critical control points into a critical context perspective in traceability in food supply chains. The initial part of the study is based on a literature review in the area of traceability combined with a number of related search words. A number of case studies have been carried out in order to map the food supply chains and better understand consumer standpoints. This paper describes how the system for distribution of food from manufacturer to end-user operates in Sweden. The chains studied all showed critical contexts. The paper suggests attitudinal changes towards overall supply chain responsibility, better resource utilisation and increased knowledge among actors. Furthermore it suggests supply chain actors to better integrate consumer insights on food safety perceptions in order to create value. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
food safety, traceability, case study, Food supply chain, consumer value, packaging, logistics, packaging logistics
in
Open Food Science Journal
volume
2
pages
49 - 56
publisher
Bentham Science Publishers
ISSN
1874-2564
DOI
10.2174/1874256400802010049
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
749a6326-58bf-4748-93f2-8d1a020c86af (old id 1148159)
alternative location
http://www.benthamscience.com/open/tofsj/articles/V002/43TOFSJ.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:54:55
date last changed
2021-05-28 02:31:24
@article{749a6326-58bf-4748-93f2-8d1a020c86af,
  abstract     = {{Processed food and eating out of the home are increasing phenomena, which presents new business opportunities for food manufacturers. However, the new food products require increased quality and safety, and thereby a more controlled distribution. The overall purpose of the research presented in this article is to describe the food supply chain from a critical context point of view in order to highlight the risks and the traceability issues. The paper expands previous discussions regarding critical control points into a critical context perspective in traceability in food supply chains. The initial part of the study is based on a literature review in the area of traceability combined with a number of related search words. A number of case studies have been carried out in order to map the food supply chains and better understand consumer standpoints. This paper describes how the system for distribution of food from manufacturer to end-user operates in Sweden. The chains studied all showed critical contexts. The paper suggests attitudinal changes towards overall supply chain responsibility, better resource utilisation and increased knowledge among actors. Furthermore it suggests supply chain actors to better integrate consumer insights on food safety perceptions in order to create value.}},
  author       = {{Olsson, Annika and Skjöldebrand, Christina}},
  issn         = {{1874-2564}},
  keywords     = {{food safety; traceability; case study; Food supply chain; consumer value; packaging; logistics; packaging logistics}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{49--56}},
  publisher    = {{Bentham Science Publishers}},
  series       = {{Open Food Science Journal}},
  title        = {{Risk Management and Quality Assurance through the Food Supply Chain – Case Studies in the Swedish Food Industry}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4238526/2521266.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.2174/1874256400802010049}},
  volume       = {{2}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}