Chickenizing Farms and Food
How Industrial Meat Production Endangers Workers, Animals, and Consumers
چگونه تولید گوشت صنعتی کارگران، حیوانات و مصرف کنندگان را تهدید میکند
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
Unsentimental study of the dangers in how meat is produced and distributed around the world, particularly in the United States.Silbergeld (Public Health/Johns Hopkins Univ.) may take a detached, academic tone toward her subject, but she has immersed herself deeply in the world of factory farms. Her reports from the "Broiler Belt" of Delmarva--the Chesapeake Bay intersection of Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia, where a substantial portion of the nation's chickens are raised--paint a credible picture of a system that has spun out of control. The author steadfastly sticks to a middle path that is likely to displease both those who long to return to an earlier, pastoral model of agriculture and those who would like to see as little government regulation of farming as possible. Silbergeld argues that, whether we like it or not, agriculture has become an industry and ought to be treated as such, which means much more government oversight than is currently in place. As the author points out, the rapid increase in "chickenization"--a term coined by the United States Department of Agriculture "to describe the global diffusion of industrial methods of food animal production"--has caused a number of problems, including worker safety issues and the disposal of vast quantities of concentrated waste. Of particular concern, she feels, is the amount of antimicrobials fed to chickens and other poultry and passed along to the humans who eat them, leading to the creation of drug-resistant bacteria. She carefully unravels the history of adding antimicrobials to feed and makes a convincing case that they do little to prevent infection--cleaning the poultry houses is far more effective--and that they are "risking the loss of the crown jewel of modern medicine, the ability to prevent and cure deadly infections with antimicrobial drugs." An insightful book that should be of interest to anyone who eats food, animal or not. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
August 1, 2016
Silbergeld (environmental health sciences, epidemiology, health policy & management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Public Health) exposes the flaws and foibles of the animal production industry in this look at the now-familiar topic of industrial agriculture. This work differs from others on the same subject by offering a way forward after a discussion of how we came to be in this current predicament. Each chapter provides context for different aspects of industrialized agriculture: the three main tenets of industrial agriculture, confinement, concentration, and vertical integration; the beginnings of industrialized agriculture and how it has spread globally; the initial rationale for feeding growth-promoting antimicrobials and the fallout from doing so; the lack of enforcement and oversight from governmental agencies that regulate the food industry; and the low-paid workers who suffer from injuries and multiple health concerns owing to the intensive agricultural practices. Silbergeld steers clear of the nutritional aspects, focusing on the production side, i.e., from farm to fork. This engaging treatise lays out a compelling case for reexamining the way we produce the food we eat. VERDICT Required reading for those who are interested in learning more about where our food comes from.--Diana Hartle, Univ. of Georgia Science Lib., Athens
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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