Catalogue description Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food: BSE Inquiry Liaison Unit: Registered Files (INQ series)
Reference: | MAF 708 |
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Title: | Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food: BSE Inquiry Liaison Unit: Registered Files (INQ series) |
Description: |
This series contains records and papers charting the Cabinet Office Inquiry into Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) and the activities of the MAFF Secretariat formed to liaise with the Inquiry team The series has files on:
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Date: | 1997-2001 |
Former reference in its original department: | INQ |
Legal status: | Public Record(s) |
Language: | English |
Creator: |
Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, BSE Inquiry Liaison Unit, 1997-2001 |
Physical description: | file(s) |
Access conditions: | Records not yet transferred |
Immediate source of acquisition: |
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs |
Accumulation dates: | 1997 to 2001 |
Selection and destruction information: | Records selected under the Records Collection Policy (3.1.2 structures and decision-making processes in government, and 3.1.4 states interaction with the physical environment). |
Accruals: | No further accruals are anticipated after transfer of current material. |
Administrative / biographical background: |
MAFF's BSE Inquiry Liaison Unit was established to provide full co-operation to the Inquiry in their investigation of their remit and to support past and present MAFF staff, past Ministers and members of advisory committees in their relationship with the Inquiry. They were also the starting point for witnesses needing access to official papers to help with the preparation of witness statements. By way of background, it is important to bear in mind that this Inquiry was a massive undertaking. Lord Phillips and his team spent nearly three years examining what happened day by day during the ten years that led up to the announcement of 20 March 1996 that BSE had probably generated a new and fatal human disease. More than 1,200 people submitted written evidence to the Inquiry; there were 138 days of public oral evidence from 333 witnesses and the team looked at 3,000 files of contemporary official documents. Up until 2001 the full estimated cost of the Inquiry to the public purse was about £29 million. The final Inquiry report was expected to consist of a main volume of perhaps 100-200 pages (containing the key findings, criticisms and recommendations and 15 supporting volumes each of at least 100 pages, amounting to 4,000 pages in all) |
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