|
Home
Ninth Central and Eastern European Roundtable
Held in Nitra
Some 70 attendees participated in the Ninth
Central and Eastern European Agricultural Information Roundtable
Meeting on "Food
Safety and Quality in Transition Countries," which was held
March 24-26, 2003, in Nitra,
Slovak
Republic. IAALD Board
Member Michal Demes served on the Organizing Committee for the
event, while IAALD Vice
President, Qiaoqiao Zhang, represented IAALD and delivered Acting
President Pamela Andre’s welcoming remarks, plus some of her
own. In addition, IAALD provided sponsorship monies for the
conference.
Anton Mangstl, Director of the Library and
Documentation Systems Division of FAO,
delivered the keynote address, “Knowledge Technologies for
Managing Food Safety Information.” He underlined the importance of
IT-technology for information storage and exchange. He also pointed
to the problem of the growing quantity of information and the
shortcomings for accessing this information. The precision of
current search engines is low, such that they do not meet user needs
adequately. He indicated that new technologies are needed to improve
the accessibility and relevance of information relating to food and
agriculture. Newly developed systems should make it possible to
efficiently collect, analyze, interpret and disseminate information
of high quality and relevance.
The conference brought together policy makers,
scientists and information specialists to discuss such important
issues as food safety and quality. The main topics covered were:
-
Responsibilities of the state and scientific
community for food safety;
-
Resources and methods for classification of
food safety;
-
Information systems and web based
communication in food safety and quality;
-
Legislative and administrative management of
food safety; and
-
Education and promotion of food safety.
For additional information about the conference,
including the full-text of many of the papers that were presented,
go to:
http://nitranet.org/conference/index.php?page=conference
--submitted by Debbie Currie, February
2004
|