Street-level diplomacy and local enforcement for meat safety in northern Tanzania

Knowledge, pragmatism and trust

Abstract

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 policy implementation in low- and middle-income countries, this paper foregrounds the ‘street-level diplomacy’ deployed by frontline actors operating in challenging contexts.

This is a publication arising from the Zoonoses and Emerging Livestock Systems (ZELS) programme

Citation

Hrynick T, Barasa V, Benschop J, Cleaveland S, Crump J, Davis M, Mariki B, Mmbaga B, Mtui-Malamsha N, Prinsen G, Sharp J, Sindiyo E, Swai E, Thomas K, Zadoks R, Waldman L (2019). Street-level diplomacy and local enforcement for meat safety in northern Tanzania: knowledge, pragmatism and trust. BMC Public Health. 19(1):863.

Street-level diplomacy and local enforcement for meat safety in northern Tanzania: knowledge, pragmatism and trust

Updates to this page

Published 3 July 2019