Summary information

Study title

Manufacturing meaning along the food commodity chain

Creator

Jackson, P, University of Sheffield

Study number / PID

852344 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-852344 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

This data collection consists of life stories, individual interview transcripts and one focus group. Recent ‘food scares’ and farming crises have led to declining consumer confidence in food safety. Focusing on two commodities, chicken and sugar, this project has investigated the social, political and technological changes that have transformed the British food industry within living memory. It uses a life-history approach (supplemented by interviews with policy-makers and consumer focus groups), recording the personal testimony of people involved at every point along the supply chain ‘from farm to fork’. Faced with the need to restore consumer trust, we argue that food producers are involved in managing the shifting cultural meanings of food as much as they are concerned with the commercial imperatives of technological change, product innovation and profitability. Questions of memory and tradition, gender and generation, authenticity and provenance (referred to here as the process of ‘manufacturing meaning’) are therefore assuming greater economic significance for the retail trade.

Methodology

Data collection period

01/03/2003 - 30/04/2007

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Group
Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Text

Data collection mode

Life history interviews; Interviews with policy makers; Consumer focus groups and interviews with 20 food industry professionals (relevant industry professionals working in poultry and sugar industries) and 1 focus group; 16 interviews took place in London and 2 interviews took place in Dorset.

Funding information

Grant number

RES-143-25-0026

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2016

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

Not available