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The Plymouth Law and Criminal Justice Review

Authors

Peter Shears

Document Type

Article

Abstract

Purposes: This article addresses the topic of food fraud which has been so widely and variously reported over recent months and years. Its purposes are to set current experience into an historical context and to illustrate the tension between the science of deception and the science of detection. Approach: This is a desk study of published literature and historical documentation, together with interviews with those professionally concerned with detection and enforcement. Findings: The piece concludes that with all the scientific developments and analytical techniques that seem so mind-bendingly sophisticated, there remains the basic problem of a lack of resources. Implications: It is asserted that we owe more to the memories and the reputations of those who pioneered the effort to combat food fraud. Without a considerable increase in the resources made available for the appliance of the science we have and are developing, the battle will never be fully engaged, yet alone won. Originality/value: This review is unique in that it seeks to take a long view of current concern, and even scandal, showing that we have been here before and that we ought to know better by now.

Publication Date

2008-01-01

Publication Title

The Plymouth Law & Criminal Justice Review

Volume

1

Issue

1

First Page

118

Last Page

139

ISSN

2054-149X

Deposit Date

March 2017

Embargo Period

2024-11-01

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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