Michigan State University food safety in North America: Regulatory and scientific issues

Food Control ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-66
Author(s):  
T.M Smith
2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikos Manouselis ◽  
Charalampos Thanopoulos ◽  
Karen Vignare ◽  
Christine Geith

In the last years, a variety of approaches and tools have been developed for giving access to Open Educational Resources (OER) related to food safety, security and food standards, as well to a various targeted audience (e.g. farmers, agronomists). The aim of this paper is to present a technology infrastructure, currently in demonstration mode at Michigan State University that will collect various agricultural education content (training descriptions, open educational content, competences and standards) and provide them through various interfaces, based on the needs of the targeted audience. The overall architecture of the infrastructure for the food safety sector and the needed components are presented, as well as the main usage scenarios that explain how the infrastructure can enhance existing platforms and services in the area of food safety and food security.


2009 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-163
Author(s):  
Nada Zohdy

In November 2008, students, scholars, and interested citizens convened inEast Lansing to hear experts speak about the Middle East. This event, “ChallengesFacing the New President in the GreaterMiddle East,” was hosted byMichigan State University’s Muslim Studies Program with generous cosponsorshipby the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU) andthe Association of Muslim Social Scientists of North America (AMSS).Speakers highlighted the topic’s timeliness, given the current global politicalclimate. Experts agreed that by heeding the nuances surrounding MiddleEastern issues and contextualizing them, a positive transformation ofAmericanpolicy can be achieved.Professor Mohammed Ayoob (Michigan State University) articulatedwhy the Middle East is significant: as the Muslim world’s spiritual and politicalheartland, understanding its politics is essential to understanding thatworld’s politics, and being the home ofmore than 60%of the world’s provenoil reserves and 40% of its natural gas makes it strategically important. Thisoverview contextualized the challenges facing the Obama administration onsuch critical regional issues as political Islam, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,and the Iraq War as well as the United States’ tenuous relations withPakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, and SaudiArabia ...


Author(s):  
James C.S. Kim

Bovine respiratory diseases cause serious economic loses and present diagnostic difficulties due to the variety of etiologic agents, predisposing conditions, parasites, viruses, bacteria and mycoplasma, and may be multiple or complicated. Several agents which have been isolated from the abnormal lungs are still the subject of controversy and uncertainty. These include adenoviruses, rhinoviruses, syncytial viruses, herpesviruses, picornaviruses, mycoplasma, chlamydiae and Haemophilus somnus.Previously, we have studied four typical cases of bovine pneumonia obtained from the Michigan State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory to elucidate this complex syndrome by electron microscopy. More recently, additional cases examined reveal electron opaque immune deposits which were demonstrable on the alveolar capillary walls, laminae of alveolar capillaries, subenthothelium and interstitium in four out of 10 cases. In other tissue collected, unlike other previous studies, bacterial organisms have been found in association with acute suppurative bronchopneumonia.


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