Reconfiguring Children in Food Law as an Essential Subset: Review of Food Nutrition Facts Labels

Posted: 14 Jun 2019

See all articles by Yi Seul KIM

Yi Seul KIM

The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Date Written: January 1, 2019

Abstract

It is troubling not to find much evidence in modern food law that distinguishes children more than early literature on food safety regulation did. We certainly fall behind science in this respect, especially if we consider how modern food law in the United States emerged. It is a product from both Food and Drug Law and Agricultural Law in response to litigations, pop culture, and public demand. It developed as responses to public outcry rather than from a microscopic perspective of progressively protecting children as a specific population group. The body of food law is written as a general superset of law, but it fails to incubate and include the necessary subsets of law to ensure appropriate enforcement and implementation of child protection. Legal experts should keep in mind the importance of looking at the world from children's perspective, while acknowledging children as rights holders. This is often an overlooked value in food law and a common mistake made as we conveniently presume that services only reach children through parents or legal guardian. Currently, we draft and implement food regulations and design food nutrition fact labels as they would be read by adults and caregivers; which should lead us to think about how we have left children in the shadows.

Keywords: Nutrition facts Label, food, children, label

Suggested Citation

KIM, Yi Seul, Reconfiguring Children in Food Law as an Essential Subset: Review of Food Nutrition Facts Labels (January 1, 2019). Drake Journal of Agricultural Law, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3397646

Yi Seul Kim (Contact Author)

The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law ( email )

Pokfulam Road
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
China

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