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Pre-packaged: corporate and political influences on children's nutrition

31 March 2022 19.30 - 20.45
Add to Calendar31/03/2022 19:3031/03/2022 20:45Europe/LondonPre-packaged: corporate and political influences on children's nutritionhttps://www.jesus.cam.ac.uk//events/pre-packaged-corporate-and-political-influences-childrens-nutritionFrankopan Hall and OnlinefalseDD/MM/YYYY15Jesus Collegeevent_11475confirmed
Frankopan Hall and Online

Extensive publicity calls out - and even blames - caregivers for poor childhood nutrition, especially paediatric obesity. Caregivers are told they should just choose healthier food for their children. 

However, well-publicised research and investigative reporting have upended many long-held nutritional beliefs and debunked ‘choice’ rhetoric. Many acknowledge that parental influence is not capable of correcting the course of poor childhood nutrition. Politics and industry influences are significant, and need to be addressed.

In this talk for the Cambridge Festival, Dr Sarah Steele, of the Intellectual Forum and Cambridge Public Health, and Emyr Davies, former intern at the Intellectual Forum, will explore the levels of influence industry exercises over public policy and ask: how can we build healthier food environments for children in the UK? 

They will highlight the situation during the COVID-19 pandemic – when public policy measures to improve childhood nutrition were often suspended, and how industry and industry groups responded to the opportunities this presented. 

Armed with new data from across Cambridge’s caregivers and schools, they ask: What have we learned for future crises? What have we learned about what works to build a healthier future for England’s children? What can caregivers really do to make a difference to their children's’ health? 

More about the speakers

Sarah Steele is the Deputy Director of the Intellectual Forum at Jesus College and is a Senior Research Associate in Cambridge Public Health in the University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine. Sarah’s research sits at the interface of Law, Criminology, International Relations and Politics, Sociology, and Global Health. It explores how we affect social change around issues that impact upon people's wellbeing in contemporary society. Her research continues to focus on cross-border issues. Having held posts at Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, the University of Cambridge, and the University of Oxford, amongst other institutions in the UK, USA and Australia, Sarah is an experienced lecturer and researcher specialising in policy and public health analysis, as well as legal, qualitative, and ethnographic research.

Emyr studied Human, Social and Political Sciences at Jesus College, Cambridge, specialising in Politics and Sociology. His research at the Intellectual Forum was centred around food poverty in the UK. In particular, he scrutinised the efficacy of free school meal provision in the context of COVID-19, along with the effectiveness of support offered to migrants. More broadly, Emyr is interested in poverty reduction in the developed and developing world, and the creation of anti-poverty mechanisms at a local, national and supranational level. 

In-person or online registration is available: please register below.