Food health law: a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food

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Food health law : a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food. / Edinger, Wieke Willemijn Huizing.

In: European Food and Feed Law Review, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2014, p. 11-19.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Edinger, WWH 2014, 'Food health law: a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food', European Food and Feed Law Review, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 11-19. <http://www.lexxion.de/zeitschriften/fachzeitschriften-englisch/effl/archive/12014.html>

APA

Edinger, W. W. H. (2014). Food health law: a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food. European Food and Feed Law Review, 9(1), 11-19. http://www.lexxion.de/zeitschriften/fachzeitschriften-englisch/effl/archive/12014.html

Vancouver

Edinger WWH. Food health law: a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food. European Food and Feed Law Review. 2014;9(1):11-19.

Author

Edinger, Wieke Willemijn Huizing. / Food health law : a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food. In: European Food and Feed Law Review. 2014 ; Vol. 9, No. 1. pp. 11-19.

Bibtex

@article{021b616b3acb450f9e16023a3dfd8d4c,
title = "Food health law: a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the {"}healthiness{"} of food",
abstract = "The EU has developed a detailed stringent set of food safety rules aimed at limiting or containing the risk that people experience negative health effects from the consumption of food. In doing so, the legislator has focused on food safety in a relatively narrow sense, not including the potential risks to human health of foods with, e.g., negative nutritional features. While EU food safety legislation seems successful in preventing food-borne illnesses, public focus has shifted to the growing prevalence of lifestyle-related illnesses. There is convincing scientific evidence of a correlation between obesity and non-communicable diseases, on the one hand, and unhealthy food on the other. The EU has taken initiatives to stop this development, but these are directed at guiding consumer choice rather than at regulating foods from the point of view of their composition and nutritional value. The question arises whether the EU would at all be competent to step in and regulate {\textquoteleft}food health{\textquoteright}. This article analyses different elements in the EU Treaties with a particular view toward a possible legal basis for regulating food health.",
author = "Edinger, {Wieke Willemijn Huizing}",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "11--19",
journal = "European Food and Feed Law Review",
issn = "1862-2720",
publisher = "Lexxion Verlagsgesellschaft mbH",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Food health law

T2 - a legal perspective on EU competence to regulate the "healthiness" of food

AU - Edinger, Wieke Willemijn Huizing

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The EU has developed a detailed stringent set of food safety rules aimed at limiting or containing the risk that people experience negative health effects from the consumption of food. In doing so, the legislator has focused on food safety in a relatively narrow sense, not including the potential risks to human health of foods with, e.g., negative nutritional features. While EU food safety legislation seems successful in preventing food-borne illnesses, public focus has shifted to the growing prevalence of lifestyle-related illnesses. There is convincing scientific evidence of a correlation between obesity and non-communicable diseases, on the one hand, and unhealthy food on the other. The EU has taken initiatives to stop this development, but these are directed at guiding consumer choice rather than at regulating foods from the point of view of their composition and nutritional value. The question arises whether the EU would at all be competent to step in and regulate ‘food health’. This article analyses different elements in the EU Treaties with a particular view toward a possible legal basis for regulating food health.

AB - The EU has developed a detailed stringent set of food safety rules aimed at limiting or containing the risk that people experience negative health effects from the consumption of food. In doing so, the legislator has focused on food safety in a relatively narrow sense, not including the potential risks to human health of foods with, e.g., negative nutritional features. While EU food safety legislation seems successful in preventing food-borne illnesses, public focus has shifted to the growing prevalence of lifestyle-related illnesses. There is convincing scientific evidence of a correlation between obesity and non-communicable diseases, on the one hand, and unhealthy food on the other. The EU has taken initiatives to stop this development, but these are directed at guiding consumer choice rather than at regulating foods from the point of view of their composition and nutritional value. The question arises whether the EU would at all be competent to step in and regulate ‘food health’. This article analyses different elements in the EU Treaties with a particular view toward a possible legal basis for regulating food health.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

SP - 11

EP - 19

JO - European Food and Feed Law Review

JF - European Food and Feed Law Review

SN - 1862-2720

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 125230553