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When Fixing Things Was the Norm: What the History of Repair Tells Us About Food Production
- May 22, 2026
- Posted by: Thanasis Stathopoulos
- Category: Social
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What does the history of repair reveal about modern food production? Drawing on recent historical research, this article explores how repair, maintenance, and hands-on technical knowledge once formed the foundation of productive systems — and why these ideas are becoming increasingly relevant again in discussions around sustainability, equipment management, resilience, and industrial Food Safety Culture.
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Historicizing the Assembly Line
- May 21, 2026
- Posted by: Thanasis Stathopoulos
- Category: Social
What can the history of the assembly line teach the modern food industry? This article explores how innovation, experimentation, cultural adaptation, and continuous improvement shaped industrial production systems — and why the transition toward sustainable food production may require the same mindset today. Drawing on David E. Nye’s America’s Assembly Line, it connects historical industrial transformation with the future challenges of Food Safety Culture and sustainability.
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Food Labelling as Science Communication (Health and Nutrition) – Insights from Science and Technology Studies
- May 20, 2026
- Posted by: Thanasis Stathopoulos
- Category: Social
Food labels are often treated as simple regulatory tools, yet they function as powerful forms of science communication. Drawing on insights from Science and Technology Studies (STS), this article explores how nutrition labels shape consumer understanding, behaviour and trust. From warning labels and traffic-light systems to the challenges of misinformation and fragmented audiences, it examines why effective food labelling depends not only on scientific accuracy, but on how people actually interpret and engage with information in everyday life.
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Beyond R&D: What Innovation Policy Theory Tells the Food Industry About the Limits of “More Science”
- May 20, 2026
- Posted by: Thanasis Stathopoulos
- Category: Social
Innovation in food systems requires more than R&D. It demands new ways of thinking about sustainability, participation, and systemic transformation.
If the challenges discussed in this article reflect situations within your organization, a structured discussion can be the next step.
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When Fixing Things Was the Norm: What the History of Repair Tells Us About Food Production
What does the history of repair reveal about modern food production? Drawing on recent historical research, this article explores how repair, maintenance, and hands-on technical knowledge once formed the foundation of productive systems — and why these ideas are becoming increasingly relevant again in discussions around sustainability, equipment management, resilience, and industrial Food Safety Culture.
May 22, 2026Read More -
Historicizing the Assembly Line
What can the history of the assembly line teach the modern food industry? This article explores how innovation, experimentation, cultural adaptation, and continuous improvement shaped industrial production systems — and why the transition toward sustainable food production may require the same mindset today. Drawing on David E. Nye’s America’s Assembly Line, it connects historical industrial transformation with the future challenges of Food Safety Culture and sustainability.
May 21, 2026Read More -
Food Labelling as Science Communication (Health and Nutrition) – Insights from Science and Technology Studies
Food labels are often treated as simple regulatory tools, yet they function as powerful forms of science communication. Drawing on insights from Science and Technology Studies (STS), this article explores how nutrition labels shape consumer understanding, behaviour and trust. From warning labels and traffic-light systems to the challenges of misinformation and fragmented audiences, it examines why effective food labelling depends not only on scientific accuracy, but on how people actually interpret and engage with information in everyday life.
May 20, 2026Read More