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Organisational forgetting: The food safety risk associated with unintentional knowledge loss

Journal

TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 118, Issue -, Pages 242-251

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tifs.2021.08.028

Keywords

Knowledge; Loss; Risk; Vulnerability; Food chain; Forgetting

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Organisational forgetting is associated with unintentional knowledge loss in food businesses, making them vulnerable to food safety incidents. Strategies need to be in place to minimise unintentional knowledge loss and ensure that critical knowledge, especially related to food safety, is retained and maintained. Key findings suggest that a knowledge retention policy addressing all types of organisational and interorganisational knowledge is necessary to mitigate the risk of unintentional loss.
Background: Organisational forgetting is associated with unintentional knowledge loss that makes both food businesses and consumers vulnerable to a food safety incident. It is essential that food businesses have strategies and processes in place to minimise unintentional knowledge loss to ensure that essential knowledge is retained, maintained and stays valid. Scope and approach: The aim of this paper is to consider the risk associated with unintentional food safety knowledge loss at individual, organisational and inter-organisational levels. The research approach employed was to undertake a review of existing literature to frame the conceptual research. Screening of both academic and grey literature demonstrated a distinct knowledge gap i.e., there is limited previous research considering the concept of unintentional knowledge loss and its impact on food safety. Case study examples explore the academic theory in more depth. Key findings and conclusions: Three aspects of organisational forgetting are considered in the context of food safety: organisational amnesia, organisational memory decay, and supply chain de acute accent j`a-vu. The first two aspects operate at the organisational level and the third at the supply chain level. To overcome the risk of unintentional loss, organisational and interorganisational knowledge needs to be effectively mapped and a knowledge retention policy needs to be developed, implemented and maintained that addresses all types of organisational and interorganisational knowledge, but especially food safety knowledge.

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