Abstract

Purpose of reviewFood systems at all levels are experiencing various states of dysfunction and crisis, and in turn their governance contributes to other intensifying crises, such as climate change, biodiversity loss and the rapid expansion of dietary-related non-communicable diseases. In many jurisdictions governments at local, state and national levels are taking action to tackle some of the key challenges confronting food systems through a range of regulatory, legislative and fiscal measures. This article comprises a narrative review summarising recent relevant literature with a focus on the intersection between corporate power and public health. The review sought to identify some of the principal barriers for the design and support of healthy food systems and environments, as well as key reforms that can be adopted to address these barriers, with a focus on the role of local governments.Recent findingsThe review found that, where permitted to do so by authorising legislative and regulatory frameworks, and where political and executive leadership prioritises healthy and sustainable food systems, local governments have demonstrated the capacity to exercise legislative and regulatory powers, such as planning powers to constrain the expansion of the fast food industry. In doing so, they have been able to advance broader goals of public health and wellbeing, as well as support the strengthening and expansion of healthy and sustainable food systems.SummaryWhilst local governments in various jurisdictions have demonstrated the capacity to take effective action to advance public health and environmental goals, such interventions take place in the context of a food system dominated by the corporate determinants of health. Accordingly, their wider health-promoting impact will remain limited in the absence of substantive reform at all levels of government.

Highlights

  • Whether we examine the factory farming of livestock [or] the proliferation of ultra-processed and unhealthy foods and sugary beverages...the underlying theme is clear: theTo provide a review of some of the principal barriers for the design and support of healthy food systems and environments, as well as some key reforms that can be adopted to address these barriers, with a focus on the role of local governments.This article is part of the Topical Collection on Public Health NutritionExtended author information available on the last page of the article1 3 contemporary global food system has generated a pandemic of non-communicable diseases and produced environmental devastation on a barely comprehensible scale

  • Enormous obstacles to such transformation exist in the Current Nutrition Reports (2022) 11:82–93 form of: (1) powerful, multinational agrifood corporations who benefit enormously from the status quo (“Big Food”); (2) food industry-focused policy directives that are geared towards manufacture and export of ultra-processed foods; (3) a ‘feed the world’ narrative founded on the expectation of cheap food and techno-optimism, all of which is underpinned by short-term thinking and profit expectations

  • We examine the ability of local governments to advance healthy and sustainable food system goals citing examples from UK and the USA, contrasted with the city of Melbourne in Australia

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Summary

Introduction

Whether we examine the factory farming of livestock [or] the proliferation of ultra-processed and unhealthy foods and sugary beverages...the underlying theme is clear: the.

Extended author information available on the last page of the article
Corporate Determinants of Health
Corporate Agnogenesis
Urban Planning and the Commercial Determinants of Health
Conclusion
Findings
Raise taxes on tobacco
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