Nutritionism and the construction of 'poor choices in families facing food insecurity
Journal of Health Psychology: An Interdisciplinary, International Journal
Published online on September 28, 2016
Abstract
The dominant research approach to both food insecurity and charitable meal provision is nutritionistic, deficit-orientated and ignores wider socio-economic issues. This reinforces existing power dynamics and overlooks the agency of people living food-insecure lives. We critique this dominant approach and draw on the everyday experiences of families facing food insecurity to ground an alternative approach that emphasises food as a social determinant of health.