Issue Contents
Vol 12 No 1 - April 2007
Media, public health and law: A lawyer's primer on the food advertising debate
Elizabeth Handsley, Chris Nehmy, Kate Mehta and John Coveney
Recent years have seen the intensification around the world of debate about the regulation of food advertising to children, against the backdrop of a marked increase in levels of overweight and obesity among children. This article is intended to introduce lawyers to that debate and to facilitate their participation in the debate, particularly in relation to television. It is timely to do so because of the Australian Communications and Media Authority's upcoming review of the Children's Television Standards.
The article sets out some information about the obesity levels in children, the nature of television food advertising and the evidence that exists to link childhood obesity with that advertising; describes and analyses the means by which food advertising on television is currently regulated in Australia and overseas; and draws attention to some of the misconceptions that the authors have noted in contributions to the debate. Finally the authors put forward a public health analysis of the issue, noting in particular the dangers in framing the issue as one of 'parental responsibility'.
Full text versions of articles are available from LexisNexis online.
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