Food Policy Food Policy Journal Watch – December 2015 by nycadmin December 16, 2015 written by nycadmin December 16, 2015 2.4K Targeting population nutrition through municipal health and food policy: Implications of New York City’s experiences in regulatory obesity prevention (Food Policy) Reducing the land use of EU pork production: where there’s swill, there’s a way (Food Policy) Reducing Food Loss and Waste While Improving The Public’s Health (Health Affairs) Risk factors for chronic undernutrition among children in India: Estimating relative importance, population attributable risk and fractions (Social Science & Medicine) Will a Fat Tax Work? (Journal of Food Protection) Energy use, blue water footprint, and greenhouse gas emissions for current food consumption patterns and dietary recommendations in the US (Environment Systems and Decisions) Energy UseEnvironment Systems and DecisionsFat Taxfood policyfood policy journal watchHealth AffairsJournal of Food ProtectionPork production EUSocial Science and Mdicine 0 comments FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail nycadmin previous post Interview with Alyson Abrami, Director, Food and Nutrition Programs, Children’s Aid Society next post Trends and Opportunities in the Food Movement, 2015-2016 Related Articles Can Meals Reduce Medical Bills? Inside New York’s... March 26, 2026 A New York Tax Credit Would Pay Restaurants... March 19, 2026 How Federal ID Requirements at Food Pantries Could... March 18, 2026 Planting Change Behind Bars: How Prison Farm Programs... March 17, 2026 What the 2025–2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans Mean... March 9, 2026 The Half-Billion-Dollar Question: Why NYC’s Food Procurement System... February 26, 2026 Six Food Policies We’re Watching in 2026 February 17, 2026 Where SNAP Stands in 2026 February 5, 2026 Three Years In, New York’s Urban Agriculture Office... January 20, 2026 Revising the Dietary Guidelines: Governance, Evidence, and Federal... December 31, 2025 Leave a Comment Cancel Reply Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.