2019
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-7067-8
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Street-level diplomacy and local enforcement for meat safety in northern Tanzania: knowledge, pragmatism and trust

Abstract: Background With increasing demand for red meat in Tanzania comes heightened potential for zoonotic infections in animals and humans that disproportionately affect poor communities. A range of frontline government employees work to protect public health, providing services for people engaged in animal-based livelihoods (livestock owners and butchers), and enforcing meat safety and food premises standards. In contrast to literature which emphasises the inadequacy of extension support and food safety… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, as "street-level bureaucrats, " these government staff have considerable discretion, often bringing their own values, priorities and understandings to bear when implementing policy (33,34). This has been framed both as problematic divergence from high-level policy goals, but also, as creative and necessary to operate effectively in complex, messy realities-especially in the face of limited resources (35,36). Slaughter workers also have substantial influence over meat safety given their daily activities of slaughter and dressing, and based on their own knowledge, concerns and priorities, deploy their own forms of risk-based decision-making.…”
Section: Background: Understanding and Managing Food Safetymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, as "street-level bureaucrats, " these government staff have considerable discretion, often bringing their own values, priorities and understandings to bear when implementing policy (33,34). This has been framed both as problematic divergence from high-level policy goals, but also, as creative and necessary to operate effectively in complex, messy realities-especially in the face of limited resources (35,36). Slaughter workers also have substantial influence over meat safety given their daily activities of slaughter and dressing, and based on their own knowledge, concerns and priorities, deploy their own forms of risk-based decision-making.…”
Section: Background: Understanding and Managing Food Safetymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, local authorities enforcing policies in a resource-poor context may explore the potential for more efficient or even solicited inspections, by building on the finding that meat inspections add commercial value-particularly meat sold in butcheries. Further research should assist local authorities to cooperate with butcheries and identify ways to organise this better [21]. Similarly, further research could explore the risk embodied in invisible pathogens, and to what extent visible signs of regular inspections, such as stamps, may have commercial value for meals cooked in eateries.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The items covered a range of questions that were in a carefully calibrated way aligned with other HAZEL research being undertaken with actors in other sections of the meat value chain such as operators of slaughter slabs and frontline government officials [21,47]. Definitions of "major events," "food safety," etc.…”
Section: Sampling and Interviewingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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