All (Food) Politics is Local: Increasing Food Access Through Local Government Action

Emily Broad Leib
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

Our national and international food system has implications for a wide range of issues that are important across the political spectrum and include improving health outcomes, reducing environmental impacts, increasing social justice, fostering economic development, and even improving homeland security. This article focuses on healthy-food access, one of the most urgent food policy issues because of its social and economic effects, as well as its public health impacts. In 2010, thirty-six percent of Americans were obese and another thirty-three percent were overweight, while eight percent of Americans were diabetic and thirty-five percent suffered from pre-diabetes. Though food access is not perfectly correlated with public health outcomes, those with limited access to healthy foods often suffer most acutely, as people living in areas with access to a supermarket exhibit a twenty-four percent lower prevalence of obesity than those living in areas without supermarkets. Increased food access has been linked to results as diverse as improved educational outcomes and crime reduction. Local governments have been particularly attentive to food policy concerns. Thirteen cities in North America now have a paid local food policy director or coordinator, and more than 130 cities and counties in the United States and Canada have local food policy councils, comprised of diverse stakeholders interested in improving the way food is produced and consumed. Municipalities have enacted a range of food policy reforms, such as increasing governmental procurement of local or healthy foods, improving access to food in schools,15 and incentivizing consumers to purchase healthy foods. Many recent local actions focus explicitly on increasing healthy-food access, including amending zoning codes to increase urban agriculture, creating new mobile vending outlets, and enhancing transportation routes to healthy-food retailers. In January 2012, the U.S. Conference of Mayors (USCM) convened its first ever Food Policy Taskforce, which immediately identified increasing access to healthy foods as one of its primary areas of concern. Local governments are also beginning to acknowledge that each locality faces its own food-system challenges with differing policy solutions, meaning that local responses to local issues can be more successful than federal or state approaches. This article aims to encourage those localities not yet active in food policy to join the field. The discussion focuses on methods of fostering access to healthy foods, such as fruits, vegetables, and other unprocessed, fresh products. Local governments are particularly well suited to increase food access because they have the unique ability to identify areas of need and then work with local constituents to craft targeted responses. Part II explains the concept of "food deserts," or areas that lack healthy-food access, and provides historical context about their development. As described in Part II.A, the federal government has attempted to respond to the problem, but its efforts have suffered as a result of its narrow food-desert definition and limited ability to work directly with affected communities. Instead, as explained in Part II.B, local government is better suited to address food access because food is such a cultural and community-based issue, and local input is vital to successfully expand food access. This section identifies steps that local governments should take to engage the community and identify appropriate solutions. Part III highlights policy responses taken by localities around the country and across the food system, illustrating that despite the similarities in the problem of limited food access, local governments have a variety of tools to address this issue and can and should tailor responses to their specific needs in order to achieve success.
所有(粮食)政治都是地方的:通过地方政府的行动增加粮食获取
我们的国家和国际粮食系统对政治范围内的一系列重要问题都有影响,包括改善健康结果、减少环境影响、增加社会公正、促进经济发展,甚至改善国土安全。这篇文章的重点是健康食品的获取,这是最紧迫的食品政策问题之一,因为它的社会和经济影响,以及它的公共卫生影响。2010年,36%的美国人肥胖,33%的人超重,8%的美国人患有糖尿病,35%的人患有糖尿病前期。虽然食物获取与公共健康结果并不完全相关,但那些无法获得健康食品的人往往受到的影响最为严重,因为生活在可以进入超市的地区的人的肥胖患病率比生活在没有超市的地区的人低24%。增加粮食供应与改善教育成果和减少犯罪等多种结果有关。地方政府尤其关注食品政策问题。北美的13个城市现在有一名有报酬的当地食品政策主任或协调员,美国和加拿大的130多个城市和县有当地的食品政策委员会,由对改善食品生产和消费方式感兴趣的各种利益相关者组成。市政当局实施了一系列食品政策改革,例如增加政府采购当地食品或健康食品,改善学校获得食品的机会15,并鼓励消费者购买健康食品。许多最近的地方行动明确侧重于增加健康食品的获取,包括修订分区代码以增加城市农业,创建新的移动自动售货点,以及改善通往健康食品零售商的运输路线。2012年1月,美国市长会议(USCM)召集了有史以来第一次食品政策特别工作组,该工作组立即将增加健康食品的获取作为其主要关注领域之一。地方政府也开始认识到,每个地方都面临着自己的粮食系统挑战,有不同的政策解决方案,这意味着地方对地方问题的反应可能比联邦或州的方法更成功。本文旨在鼓励那些尚未积极参与粮食政策的地方加入这一领域。讨论的重点是促进获得健康食品的方法,如水果、蔬菜和其他未经加工的新鲜产品。地方政府特别适合增加粮食供应,因为他们有独特的能力确定需要的领域,然后与当地选民合作制定有针对性的应对措施。第二部分解释了“食物沙漠”的概念,即缺乏健康食品的地区,并提供了其发展的历史背景。如第二部分所述。首先,联邦政府试图对这个问题做出回应,但由于其狭隘的食物沙漠定义和直接与受影响社区合作的能力有限,其努力受到了影响。相反,正如第二部分所解释的那样。第二,地方政府更适合解决粮食获取问题,因为粮食是一个文化和社区问题,地方投入对成功扩大粮食获取至关重要。本节确定了地方政府应采取的步骤,以吸引社区参与并确定适当的解决方案。第三部分重点介绍了全国各地和整个粮食系统采取的政策应对措施,说明尽管在粮食供应有限的问题上存在相似之处,但地方政府有各种各样的工具来解决这一问题,并且可以而且应该根据自己的具体需求量身定制应对措施,以取得成功。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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