About this item
- Title
- Nutritionism in a food policy context: The case of ‘animal protein’
- Content partner
- Lincoln University
- Collection
- Lincoln University Research Archive
- Description
Reductionist approaches to food focus on isolated nutritional criteria, ignoring the broader physiological and societal benefits and trade-offs involved. They can lead to the inadvertent or, potentially, intentional labelling of foods as good or bad. Both can be considered worrisome. Among our present-day array of issues is the disproportionate stigmatisation of animalsource foods as harmful for human and planetary health. The case for a protein transition reinforces this trend, overemphasisi...
- Format
- Research Paper
- Research format
- Journal article
- Date created
- 2022-02-21
- Creator
- Leroy, Frédéric / Beal, Ty / Gregorini, Pablo / McAuliffe, Graham A / van Vliet, Stephan
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/10182/14863
- Related subjects
- dairy / eggs / livestock / meat / plant-based / poultry / vegan / vegetarian / Nutritional science / Consumer-oriented product or service development / Nutrition and dietetics not elsewhere classified / Food properties (incl. characteristics and health benefits) / Public health not elsewhere classified / Food sustainability / Sustainable agricultural development / Policy and administration not elsewhere classified / Agricultural, veterinary and food sciences / Biological sciences / Environmental sciences
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 13 April 2022, and updated 11 March 2025.
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