Power Imbalances, Food Insecurity, and Children's Rights in Canada

被引:4
|
作者
Blay-Palmer, Alison [1 ]
机构
[1] Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Ctr Sustainable Food Syst, Waterloo, ON, Canada
关键词
rights; power; food insecurity; Canada; children; neoliberal; POLICY;
D O I
10.3389/fpubh.2016.00117
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Increasingly, food is provided through an industrial food system that separates people from the source of their food and results in high rates of food insecurity, particularly for the most vulnerable in society. A lack of food is a symptom of a lack of power in a system that privileges free market principles over social justice and the protection of human rights. In Canada, the high rates of food insecurity among Canadian children is a reflection of their lack of power and the disregard of their human rights, despite the adoption of the United Nations (UN) Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1991 and ratification of the International Covenant on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights in 1976, which established the right to food for all Canadians. Dueling tensions between human rights and market forces underpin this unacceptable state of affairs in Canada. Gaventa's "power cube" that describes different facets of power - including spaces, levels, and forms - is used to help understand the power imbalances that underlie this injustice. The analysis considers the impact of neoliberal free market principles on the realization of human rights, and the negative impacts this can have on health and well-being for the most vulnerable in society. Canadian case studies from both community organizations provide examples of how power can be shifted to achieve more inclusive, rights-based policy and action. Given increased global pressures toward more open trade markets and national austerity measures that hollow out social supports, Canada provides a cautionary tale for countries in the EU and the US, and for overall approaches to protect the most vulnerable in society.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Food Insecurity and Children's Rights to Adequate Nutrition in Europe
    Pettoello-Mantovani, Massimo
    Ehrich, Jochen
    Sacco, Michele
    Ferrara, Pietro
    Giardino, Ida
    Pop, Tudor Lucian
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 2018, 198 : 329 - +
  • [2] Food Insecurity and Migraine in Canada
    Gordon, K. E.
    Dooley, J.
    Kuhle, S.
    [J]. HEADACHE, 2015, 55 : 142 - 142
  • [3] Food insecurity and migraine in Canada
    Dooley, Joseph M.
    Gordon, Kevin E.
    Kuhle, Stefan
    [J]. CEPHALALGIA, 2016, 36 (10) : 936 - 942
  • [4] The Challenge of Children's Rights for Canada
    Hoff, Joan Whitman
    [J]. AMERICAN REVIEW OF CANADIAN STUDIES, 2008, 38 (01) : 111 - 114
  • [5] The challenge of children's rights for Canada
    Dobrowolsky, A
    [J]. CANADIAN PUBLIC POLICY-ANALYSE DE POLITIQUES, 2002, 28 (04): : 613 - 615
  • [6] Neighborhood poverty and children's food insecurity
    Morrissey, Taryn W.
    Oellerich, Don
    Meade, Erica
    Simms, Jeffrey
    Stock, Ann
    [J]. CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW, 2016, 66 : 85 - 93
  • [7] Food banks, welfare, and food insecurity in Canada
    Tarasuk, Valerie
    Dachner, Naomi
    Loopstra, Rachel
    [J]. BRITISH FOOD JOURNAL, 2014, 116 (09): : 1405 - 1417
  • [8] The Relation Between Household Food Insecurity and Children's Height in Canada and the United States: A Scoping Review
    St-Germain, Andree-Anne Fafard
    Siddiqi, Arjumand
    [J]. ADVANCES IN NUTRITION, 2019, 10 (06) : 1126 - 1137
  • [9] Food security, food insecurity, and Canada's national food policy: Meaning, measures, and assessment
    Deaton, B. James
    Scholz, Alexander
    [J]. OUTLOOK ON AGRICULTURE, 2022, 51 (03) : 303 - 312
  • [10] Food insecurity in Canada - Authors reply
    Power, Elaine M.
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF DIETETIC PRACTICE AND RESEARCH, 2006, 67 (04) : 170 - 170