Making Food Standard: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Food Standards of Identity, 1930s–1960s

IF 1.3 2区 历史学 Q3 BUSINESS
X. Frohlich
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article looks at the implementation of food standards of identity by the U.S Food and Drug Administration from the 1930s to the 1960s, a period in the FDA’s history wedged between the “era of adulteration” of the early twentieth century and the agency’s turn to “informational regulation” starting in the 1970s. The article describes the origin of food standards in the early twentieth century and outlines the political economy of government-mandated food standards in the 1930s. While consumer advocates believed government standards would be important to consumer empowerment because they would simplify choices at the grocery store, many in the food industry believed government standards would clash with private brands. The FDA faced challenges in defining what were “customary” standards for foods in an increasingly industrial food economy, and new diet-food marketing campaigns in the 1950s and 1960s ultimately led to the food standards system's undoing. The article concludes by looking at how FDA food standards came to be framed cynically, even though voluntary food standardization continued and the system of informative labeling that replaced FDA standards led to precisely the problem government standards were intended to solve.
制定食品标准:美国食品和药物管理局的食品识别标准,20世纪30年代至60年代
本文着眼于美国食品和药物管理局从20世纪30年代到60年代对食品身份标准的实施,这是FDA历史上的一个时期,介于20世纪初的“掺假时代”和20世纪70年代开始的“信息监管”。这篇文章描述了20世纪初食品标准的起源,并概述了20世纪30年代政府强制食品标准的政治经济学。虽然消费者权益倡导者认为政府标准对消费者赋权很重要,因为它们将简化杂货店的选择,但食品行业的许多人认为,政府标准将与私人品牌发生冲突。在日益工业化的食品经济中,FDA在定义食品的“习惯”标准方面面临挑战,20世纪50年代和60年代的新饮食食品营销活动最终导致了食品标准体系的瓦解。文章的结论是,尽管自愿食品标准化仍在继续,取代FDA标准的信息标签系统恰恰导致了政府标准想要解决的问题,但FDA的食品标准是如何被冷嘲冷讽地制定出来的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: The Business History Review is a quarterly publication of original research by historians, economists, sociologists, and scholars of business administration. BHR"s ongoing mission, from its 1926 inception as the Bulletin of the Business Historical Society, is to encourage and aid the study of the evolution of business in all periods and all countries. The Business History Review is published in the spring, summer, autumn, and winter by Harvard Business School and is printed at The Sheridan Press in Pennsylvania.
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