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Healthy Eating Policy: Racial Liberalism, Global Connections and Contested Science

Version 2 2024-06-19, 16:20
Version 1 2023-02-20, 04:35
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 16:20 authored by Christopher MayesChristopher Mayes
AbstractThe challenges to designing and implementing ethically and politically meaningful eating policies are many and complex. This article provides a brief overview of Anne Barnhill and Matteo Bonotti’s Healthy Eating Policy and Political Philosophy: A Public Reason Approach while also critically engaging with the place of racial justice, global interconnectedness, and debates over science in thinking about ethics and politics of public health nutrition and policy. I do not aim to burden Barnhill and Bonotti with the responsibility to fully address these issues, but considering the interconnection of these issues and the ever pressing effects of climate change on local and global food systems, we collectively need to turn to these difficult and pressing questions about what a just food system looks like, what concerns are centred, and who is left out. I group these engagements with Barnhill and Bonotti under three headings: racial liberalism, global food system, and contested nutrition science. I conclude with some remarks about locality.

History

Journal

Food Ethics

Volume

8

Article number

1

Pagination

1-

Location

Switzerland

ISSN

2364-6853

eISSN

2364-6861

Language

en

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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