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ID121209
Title ProperEveryday approaches to food safety in Kunming
LanguageENG
AuthorKlein, Jakob A
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The article explores how people in Kunming have interpreted and acted upon food-related environmental health threats, particularly within the contexts of everyday food shopping. It is argued that an increasingly intensified, delocalized food supply system and a state-led emphasis on individual responsibility and choice have produced growing uncertainties about food. However, the article takes issue with the claim that new forms of risk and institutional changes have produced "individualized" responses, arguing that many of the practices Kunmingers have developed to handle food-related risks and their understandings of what constitutes "safe" food have been developed within the frameworks of family ties and regional cuisine. Further, shoppers and purveyors of food have forged new ties of trust and re-emphasized connections between people, food and place. Nevertheless, concerns about the food supply are a source of discontent which is feeding into wider ambivalences towards modernization. This is particularly acute among the economically disadvantaged.
`In' analytical NoteChina Quarterly vol. , No.214; Jun 2013: p.376-393
Journal SourceChina Quarterly vol. , No.214; Jun 2013: p.376-393
Key WordsFood Safety ;  Risk ;  Trust ;  Food Shopping ;  Urban China ;  Individualization


 
 
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