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The dragnet of children's feeding programs in Atlantic Canada

Jutta B. Dayle, Lynn McIntyre and Kim D. Raine-Travers

Social Science & Medicine, 2000, vol. 51, issue 12, 1783-1793

Abstract: Ivan Illich's 1976 prediction that medical dragnets will continue was correct. Now quasi-health dragnets are being established ostensibly to feed children perceived to be hungry. Our qualitative, multi-site case study found that programs justify their expansion to non-target group children as a means of reducing stigmatization, while reaching only an estimated one-third of targeted children. The dragnet continues as new services are added and franchising is proposed while the purpose of the program -- feeding healthy foods to children -- ultimately succumbs to drives for efficiency and the desire to maintain the program itself. In this field of social power relations, children become commodified through dialectical interplays among fundamental needs, manipulated needs, benevolence, and domination.

Keywords: Hunger; Children; Nutrition; Lunch; programs; Breakfast; programs (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2000
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