13 On reputation interdependence, see Timothy D. Lytton, Outbreak: Foodborne Illness and the Struggle for Food Safety (Chicago, 2019), 237–38, 334–35. Others describe food standards as evidence that “co-regulation” has become a common mode in food safety governance. Marian Garcia Martinez, Andrew Fearne, Julie A. Caswell, and Spencer Henson, “Co-regulation as a Possible Model for Food Safety Governance: Opportunities for Public-Private Partnerships,” Food Policy 32, no. 3 (2007): 299–314. See Edward J. Balleisen, “The Prospects for Effective Coregulation in the United States: A Historian's View from the Early Twenty-First Century,” in Government and Markets: Toward a New Theory of Regulation, ed. Edward J. Balleisen and David A. Moss (Cambridge, U.K., 2009), 443; Ashton Wynette Merck, “The Fox Guarding the Henhouse: Coregulation and Consumer Protection in Food Safety, 1946–2002” (PhD diss., Duke University, 2020).