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"Don't Have A Cow, Man!": Recognizing Herd Share Agreements for Raw Milk.
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- المؤلفون: Mayer TJ
- المصدر:
Health matrix (Cleveland, Ohio : 1991) [Health Matrix Clevel] 2015; Vol. 25, pp. 383-435.
- نوع النشر :
Journal Article
- اللغة:
English
- معلومة اضافية
- المصدر:
Publisher: Case Western Reserve University School of Law Country of Publication: United States NLM ID: 9311154 Publication Model: Print Cited Medium: Print ISSN: 0748-383X (Print) Linking ISSN: 0748383X NLM ISO Abbreviation: Health Matrix Clevel
- بيانات النشر:
Original Publication: Cleveland, Ohio : Case Western Reserve University School of Law, c1991-
- الموضوع:
- نبذة مختصرة :
Dissatisfaction with the industrial model of food production has caused many consumers to seek out food produced on local, family-scale farms that use U.S. Department of Agriculture certified organic or other sustainable practices to grow their food and raise their livestock. While almost all of the types of food that are available at the grocery store can also be found at the local farmers market, one food that is difficult to find in many states is raw milk—that is, milk that has not undergone pasteurization (heat treatment). This difficulty lies in the fact that most states prohibit the direct retail sale of raw milk to the final consumer because public health officials and state legislators fear that raw milk may contain bacteria harmful to human health such as E. coli, Campylobacter, and Listeria. However, some consumers reject these warnings and instead believe that raw milk possesses both nutritional and medicinal qualities. Indeed, an ever-increasing body of scientific research published in peer-reviewed journals supports the claim that raw milk consumption can mitigate or prevent some allergies and infections, especially in young children. In order for consumers to obtain raw milk in states where its sale is prohibited, some consumers have entered into arrangements with farmers known as “herd sharing,” through which the consumer effectively becomes an owner of the herd of cows or goats. For the price of the share and a monthly boarding fee, the shareholder can receive a weekly distribution of the herd’s primary dividend, namely the raw milk. Several states expressly permit this practice while most are silent and still a few prohibit it outright. The three courts in the United States that have ruled on herd share agreements have split, with two courts rejecting the agreements as a circumvention of the state’s prohibition on the sale of raw milk, and the other court assuming the agreement’s validity in light of the state’s failure to adequately define “sale.” I argue that courts should consistently uphold properly written herd share agreements where such agreements are not prohibited because such agreements are deeply rooted in the longstanding practice of shared ownership agreements for livestock found throughout the agriculture industry. Furthermore, raw milk has been found by some researchers to be a low-risk food that may actually have some nutritional and even medicinal qualities not found in pasteurized milk. And to the extent that raw milk consumption could cause harm, the risk of a large-scale outbreak from milk obtained through a herd share is slight considering how few participants are in any given herd share.
- الموضوع:
Date Created: 20180302 Date Completed: 20180508 Latest Revision: 20180508
- الموضوع:
20221213
- الرقم المعرف:
29493190
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