Journal article

Consumers' perceptions of meat safety and quality - a qualitative content analysis from Afghanistan


Authors listNasiri, Mustafa; Gassler, Birgit; Teuber, Ramona

Publication year2023

Pages3404-3421

JournalBritish Food Journal

Volume number125

Issue number9

ISSN0007-070X

eISSN1758-4108

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-07-2022-0646

PublisherEmerald


Abstract

Purpose: This study analyses consumers' perception of meat quality and safety in Afghanistan at the pre-harvest, harvest and post-harvest stages.

Design/methodology/approach: Qualitative data were collected through seven focus group discussions with 52 participants in Kabul and Bamyan, Afghanistan, between September and December 2020. A qualitative content analysis was undertaken using the Total Food Quality Model and the MAXQDA software.

Findings: At the pre-harvest stage, both sedentary and nomadic ruminants' meat was perceived as high in quality and safety, with lower food safety hazards, unlike urban-raised ruminants' meat. At the harvest stage, supermarket meat was perceived as better in hygiene, but not in freshness. Additionally, there were doubts about the Halal-slaughtering of this meat. Conversely, butchery meat was perceived as fresh, natural and trustworthy, but unhygienic. At the post-harvest stage, the most important quality attributes before purchase were color, freshness, place-of-origin, safety and Halal-slaughtering, and after purchase were taste and tenderness. Lack of consumer trust was also noticed for the formal institution, i.e. supermarket meat.

Research limitations/implications: This study provides valuable new results from Afghanistan that could be transferred to other Islamic-developing countries given the similarities in their meat industry, i.e. availability of both formal and informal institutions, and the sensitivity of Muslim consumers to Halal-slaughtering. Nonetheless, the qualitative nature of the study design demands further research, employing, e.g. a quantitative approach. Future studies conducted in other countries with similar context could validate the results of this paper.

Originality/value: Knowledge on consumer behavior in Afghanistan is scarce. The present study is one among a few that provides empirical evidence on Afghan consumers. Additionally, it is the first study to compare consumers' perceptions of traditional butchery meat and supermarket meat.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleNasiri, M., Gassler, B. and Teuber, R. (2023) Consumers' perceptions of meat safety and quality - a qualitative content analysis from Afghanistan, British Food Journal, 125(9), pp. 3404-3421. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-07-2022-0646

APA Citation styleNasiri, M., Gassler, B., & Teuber, R. (2023). Consumers' perceptions of meat safety and quality - a qualitative content analysis from Afghanistan. British Food Journal. 125(9), 3404-3421. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-07-2022-0646


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:14