How theory can help to understand the potential impact of food environment policies on socioeconomic inequalities in diet: an application of Bourdieu’s capital theory and the scarcity theory

Author:

Djojosoeparto Sanne K1,Kamphuis Carlijn B M2,Harrington Janas M3,Løvhaug Anne Lene4,Roos Gun5,Sawyer Alexia D M6,Stronks Karien6,Terragni Laura4,Torheim Liv Elin47,Vandevijvere Stefanie8,Poelman Maartje P9,van Lenthe Frank J110

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University , Utrecht, The Netherlands

2. Department of Interdisciplinary Social Science, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Utrecht University , Utrecht, The Netherlands

3. School of Public Health, University College Cork , Cork, Ireland

4. Department of Nursing and Health Promotion, OsloMet—Oslo Metropolitan University , Oslo, Norway

5. Consumption Research Norway (SIFO), OsloMet—Oslo Metropolitan University , Oslo, Norway

6. Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam , Amsterdam, The Netherlands

7. Department of Physical Health and Ageing, Norwegian Institute of Public Health , Oslo, Norway

8. Service of Lifestyle and Chronic Diseases, Sciensano , Brussels, Belgium

9. Chair Group Consumption and Healthy Lifestyles, Department of Social Sciences, Wageningen University & Research , Wageningen, The Netherlands

10. Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam , Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Government policies that promote healthy food environments are considered promising to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in diet. Empirical evidence of effects on these inequalities, however, is relatively scarce and, with a few exceptions, tends to be inconclusive. We use two contemporary theories that help to understand socioeconomic inequalities in health and health-related behaviours (Bourdieu’s capital theory and Mullainathan and Shafir’s scarcity theory) to reason how policies influencing food environments may differentially impact lower and higher socioeconomic groups. In essence, these theories enable us to understand how specific elements of broader daily living conditions (e.g. social practices that lead to habitus formation, material conditions that shape experiences of scarcity) may lead to a greater benefit of certain food environment policies for the healthfulness of diets of lower or higher socioeconomic groups. We conclude that the application of theories on the mechanisms underlying socioeconomic inequalities in health can help to guide future empirical studies in testing theory-based hypotheses on differential effects of policies, and thereby enhance the development of effective policies tackling socioeconomic inequalities in dietary intakes.

Funder

The Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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