This is one of the first books to draw together information and views
about international control of food safety from around the world.
Demands for safe food, against a background of increasing trade, are
making international controls on food safety essential. Agreements on
how to control the safety of food to meet these needs are now in place
among the major trading blocks, particularly in Europe and in the USA,
and more recently, in Australia. This book also describes progress in
areas such as systematically reviewing risk from food; developing
national infrastructures to enforce standards; and growing input from
consumer groups and others, including economists, to the debate on how
to set international food standards.
Discussed in depth is the effort to achieve global standards for food
safety under the auspices of the Codex Alimentarius Commission. There
are chapters from world-leading experts on Codex, international control
of radiological contamination, pesticides and veterinary drugs, and
other chemical contaminants.