Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries

To address malnutrition in low- and middle income countries (LMICs), more evidence is needed about the potential of food system innovations to help guide the transformation towards healthier, more sustainable, and equitable food systems. This paper reviews the literature on food system innovations in the food environment and addressing consumer behavior on diet and nutrition-related outcomes in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other LMICs, then highlights promising innovations and demonstrates gaps in the literature. In the food environment, promising innovations include nutrition-relevant multi-sectoral national policy backed by effective implementation; institutional purchasing offering healthy meals in school or factory environments; compulsory nutrition labelling; and fortified foods, if these can be durably offered or viably commercialised. Promising innovations influencing consumer behavior include unhealthy food taxes; large-scale information campaigns raising awareness about specific unhealthy food items; and campaigns that provide information and/or fortified food (supplements) to address nutrition of infants and young children. Promoting women’s empowerment and targeting women with nutrition information could be effective food system innovations addressing consumer behavior, but deliberation is needed about risks of emphasizing the instrumental role of gender equity and women’s empowerment for nutrition or reinforcing gender roles and increasing women’s responsibilities. That said, our review also demonstrates a general lack of evidence on most types of food system innovations in the four primary countries of study. More evidence is needed on several types of food systems innovations before definitive advice can be given on guiding food systems transformations towards healthier diet outcomes. This review therefore acts as a starting point for addressing country-specific food system challenges and identifies needs for further research.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lecoutere, E.I., van den Berg, M.M., de Brauw, Alan
Format: Working paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: IFPRI
Subjects:consumer behavior, food environment, food systems, literature review,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effective-food-system-innovations-an-inventory-of-evidence-from-b
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-587353
record_format koha
spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5873532024-06-25 Lecoutere, E.I. van den Berg, M.M. de Brauw, Alan Working paper Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries 2021 To address malnutrition in low- and middle income countries (LMICs), more evidence is needed about the potential of food system innovations to help guide the transformation towards healthier, more sustainable, and equitable food systems. This paper reviews the literature on food system innovations in the food environment and addressing consumer behavior on diet and nutrition-related outcomes in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other LMICs, then highlights promising innovations and demonstrates gaps in the literature. In the food environment, promising innovations include nutrition-relevant multi-sectoral national policy backed by effective implementation; institutional purchasing offering healthy meals in school or factory environments; compulsory nutrition labelling; and fortified foods, if these can be durably offered or viably commercialised. Promising innovations influencing consumer behavior include unhealthy food taxes; large-scale information campaigns raising awareness about specific unhealthy food items; and campaigns that provide information and/or fortified food (supplements) to address nutrition of infants and young children. Promoting women’s empowerment and targeting women with nutrition information could be effective food system innovations addressing consumer behavior, but deliberation is needed about risks of emphasizing the instrumental role of gender equity and women’s empowerment for nutrition or reinforcing gender roles and increasing women’s responsibilities. That said, our review also demonstrates a general lack of evidence on most types of food system innovations in the four primary countries of study. More evidence is needed on several types of food systems innovations before definitive advice can be given on guiding food systems transformations towards healthier diet outcomes. This review therefore acts as a starting point for addressing country-specific food system challenges and identifies needs for further research. en IFPRI application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effective-food-system-innovations-an-inventory-of-evidence-from-b 10.2499/p15738coll2.134401 https://edepot.wur.nl/554337 consumer behavior food environment food systems literature review (c) other Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic consumer behavior
food environment
food systems
literature review
consumer behavior
food environment
food systems
literature review
spellingShingle consumer behavior
food environment
food systems
literature review
consumer behavior
food environment
food systems
literature review
Lecoutere, E.I.
van den Berg, M.M.
de Brauw, Alan
Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
description To address malnutrition in low- and middle income countries (LMICs), more evidence is needed about the potential of food system innovations to help guide the transformation towards healthier, more sustainable, and equitable food systems. This paper reviews the literature on food system innovations in the food environment and addressing consumer behavior on diet and nutrition-related outcomes in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other LMICs, then highlights promising innovations and demonstrates gaps in the literature. In the food environment, promising innovations include nutrition-relevant multi-sectoral national policy backed by effective implementation; institutional purchasing offering healthy meals in school or factory environments; compulsory nutrition labelling; and fortified foods, if these can be durably offered or viably commercialised. Promising innovations influencing consumer behavior include unhealthy food taxes; large-scale information campaigns raising awareness about specific unhealthy food items; and campaigns that provide information and/or fortified food (supplements) to address nutrition of infants and young children. Promoting women’s empowerment and targeting women with nutrition information could be effective food system innovations addressing consumer behavior, but deliberation is needed about risks of emphasizing the instrumental role of gender equity and women’s empowerment for nutrition or reinforcing gender roles and increasing women’s responsibilities. That said, our review also demonstrates a general lack of evidence on most types of food system innovations in the four primary countries of study. More evidence is needed on several types of food systems innovations before definitive advice can be given on guiding food systems transformations towards healthier diet outcomes. This review therefore acts as a starting point for addressing country-specific food system challenges and identifies needs for further research.
format Working paper
topic_facet consumer behavior
food environment
food systems
literature review
author Lecoutere, E.I.
van den Berg, M.M.
de Brauw, Alan
author_facet Lecoutere, E.I.
van den Berg, M.M.
de Brauw, Alan
author_sort Lecoutere, E.I.
title Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
title_short Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
title_full Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
title_fullStr Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
title_full_unstemmed Effective Food System Innovations : An inventory of evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Viet Nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
title_sort effective food system innovations : an inventory of evidence from bangladesh, ethiopia, nigeria, viet nam, and other low- and middle-income countries
publisher IFPRI
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effective-food-system-innovations-an-inventory-of-evidence-from-b
work_keys_str_mv AT lecoutereei effectivefoodsysteminnovationsaninventoryofevidencefrombangladeshethiopianigeriavietnamandotherlowandmiddleincomecountries
AT vandenbergmm effectivefoodsysteminnovationsaninventoryofevidencefrombangladeshethiopianigeriavietnamandotherlowandmiddleincomecountries
AT debrauwalan effectivefoodsysteminnovationsaninventoryofevidencefrombangladeshethiopianigeriavietnamandotherlowandmiddleincomecountries
_version_ 1813195241984884736