
Min Qingfei
Professor Supervisor of Doctorate Candidates Supervisor of Master's Candidates
Gender:Male
Alma Mater:DUT
Degree:Doctoral Degree
School/Department:Faculty of Management & Economics, DUT
Discipline:Information Management and E-Government. Enterprise Management
Business Address:Room 406
Building of Faculty of Management & Economics,
Contact Information:
E-Mail:
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Date:2019-03-09
Indexed by:Journal Papers
Date of Publication:2015-06-01
Journal:JOURNAL OF APPLIED POULTRY RESEARCH
Included Journals:Scopus、SCIE
Volume:24
Issue:2
Page Number:215-221
ISSN:1056-6171
Key Words:H7N9; live bird market; poultry meat; supply chain
Abstract:During the past two decades, food safety issues in China not only posed serious threats to Chinese consumers but also damaged the image of Chinese products internationally. In China, food safety is not only about scientific discoveries, advanced laboratories, and sanitation equipment; it is more about the role of different players in the food supply chain. The poultry meat supply chain is instrumental in the spread of the avian influenza A virus (H7N9), raising questions about how policymakers respond to such threats and whether industries need to be restructured to manage and control this epidemic so that it does not recur. As a short-term measure, to prevent the spread of this disease, government authorities enforced the closure of live bird markets (LBM) in disease-affected areas of China. However, in the long term, the poultry meat supply chain needs to be restructured. The aim of the current study was to analyze distribution channels for chicken meat in China and then describe arrangements in poultry meat sectors that incorporate small-and medium-scale producers into the supply chain while responding to shifts in LBMs. We also assessed the role of LBMs in spreading H7N9 and how these interventions affect the poultry meat supply chain in the Chinese market.
Dr. Qingfei Min
Professor of Information Systems
PhD Supervisor
Director of Institute of Information System & Business Analytics
Visiting Scholar of University of Southern California (2010)
Member of the AIS
Research Fields:
IT/IS behavior and strategies
E-commerce/Mobile commerce/Social Commerce
Digital Transformation
Artificial Intelligence Application
Blockchain Innovation
Publications:
50+ Journal articles (25 SSCI/SCI indexed)
40+ Conference papers
4 Monographs
2 Textbooks