The political economy of infant and young child feeding: confronting corporate power, overcoming structural barriers, and accelerating progress
Deakin University · Australian National University · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Despite increasing evidence about the value and importance of breastfeeding, less than half of the world's infants and young children (aged 0-36 months) are breastfed as recommended. This Series paper examines the social, political, and economic reasons for this problem. First, this paper highlights the power of the commercial milk formula (CMF) industry to commodify the feeding of infants and young children; influence policy at both national and international levels in ways that grow and sustain CMF markets; and externalise the social, environmental, and economic costs of CMF. Second, this paper examines how breastfeeding is undermined by economic policies and systems that ignore the value of care work by…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 234
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Breastfeeding
- Politics
- Ideology
- Power (physics)
- Promotion (chess)
- Economic power
- Economic growth
- Medicine