ABSTRACT

Recent advances in agri-food technology have brought increasing complexity and emerging challenges to food safety regulation and governance, with many countries greatly divided in their regulatory approaches. As more advanced CRISPR-based gene-editing technologies and novel foods such as cloned animal products, non-traditional plants, nanofood, and plant-based meat are rapidly being developed, debates arise as to whether the existing models of governance require revision to ensure consumer safety. Of equal importance is the extensive use of pesticides, additives, and animal drugs, which raise concerns over the methods and approaches of government approval and phasing out of potentially risk-causing chemicals. Heightened public criticism of food safety and technology poses a signifi cant challenge to governments around the world, which struggle to strike a proper balance between technocracy- and democracy-oriented risk governance models.

Drawing on expertise from the United States, European Union, Japan, China, Korea, Association of South East Asian Nations, Malaysia, and Taiwan, this book explores existing and emerging issues of food law and policy in the context of technology governance to offer an overarching framework for the interaction between food regulation and technology.

It will be essential reading for academics, students, and practitioners with an interest in food law and policy, agricultural law and policy, and food safety and nutrition studies.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

part I|45 pages

Rethinking Risk Governance and Food Safety

chapter 2|14 pages

Phasing Out Certain Antibiotics in Food Animals

The U.S. Approach in Light of Precautions and Cost-Benefit Analysis

chapter 4|12 pages

Regulating Gene Technology in Food

The American Approach and Practice

part II|62 pages

Emerging Technologies and their Ramifications for Food Safety Governance

chapter 6|29 pages

Blockchainizing Food Law

Promises and Perils of Incorporating Distributed Ledger Technologies to Food Safety, Traceability, and Sustainability Governance

part III|64 pages

Regulatory Options for Foods Derived From Genome-Editing Technology and Novel Materials

part IV|48 pages

Health/Functional Food Regulation from a Comparative Perspective

chapter 13|14 pages

Effective Health Foods Versus Ineffective Drugs

Governing and Marketing Glucosamine Products in Taiwan

chapter 14|15 pages

Classification as a Technology of Governance

Food or Drug in South Korea