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James Lawless and Klaus Wiedemann
European Meat Inspection – Continuity and Change in Building a (more) Risk-Based System of Regulation
The regulation of meat safety has occupied much of the European Union’s legislative, policy and political time since the earliest days of European integration. Among the first pieces of Community legislation in the 1960s were Directive 64/432 and Directive 64/433 setting harmonised standards for intra-Community trade in bovine and porcine animals and meat. Controversy has also marked the regulation of these commodities over almost five decades: from the infamous Franco-Italian dispute over veterinary inspections in the 1976 Simmenthal1 case, to the control of hormones in the 1980s, through to the (mis)management of BSE and the Belgian meat dioxin contamination in the 1990s. Meeting these c...
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EStAL Reading of Intimate Brussels - Living amongst Eurocrats 30 March 2011, 18.30 pm @ European Parliament For one year, Martin Leidenfrost explored Europe’s capital and wrote fifty personal – tender, alienated, mischievous – portraits.
“Entertaining, amusing, insightful.” The Gap |








