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Presently, ideas about food are in flux from a variety of sources.
Examples of this evolution include recognizing the importance of
food on health by public health and medical professionals; changing
consumer desires around the production methods and components of
their food; a greater focus on injustices within the national food
system; evolving knowledge of how the food system impacts the
environment; and, shifting economic and technological realities
that underpin where and how food is produced, distributed and sold.
These shifting ideas about food exist in contrast to the narrative
of the highly functioning, industrialized, global food system that
emerged in the second half of the 20th century. This edited volume
fills a void by presenting a comprehensive and engaging coverage of
the key issues at the intersection of public health, policy, and
food. The Intersection of Food and Public Health is comprised of
research that examines current problems in food studies and how
various stakeholders are attempting to address problems in unique
ways. The book will be of interest to undergraduate and graduate
students in a variety of disciplines, including public
administration, public policy, public health, economics, political
science, nutrition, dietetics, and food studies.
Food and the systems that produce, disrupt, prepare it are central
to all human life. Yet, scholarly analysis of the food systems that
support human life are highly fragmented across a variety of
disciplines. Public administration, with its focus on the doing of
public policy, would seem to be a logical home for analysis of food
systems in action. However, food is largely ignored by public
administration scholars, and scholars from other disciplines can
unintentionally draw up established public administration
literature. The chapters in this edited volume highlight where the
lenses and languages of public administration can and should be
used to analyze food systems. Viewed collectively, the editors
argue that the lenses and languages of public administration can
and should become a common ground for scholars and practitioners to
discuss food systems.
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