Brooks Benjamin
J Law Med. 2015 Sep;23(1):106-20.
Sensitive to allegations of "nanny state" paternalism, Australian governments support the doctrine that combating obesity is a matter of personal responsibility. Policy-makers endorse the "holistic" approach to obesity prevention, with a view to managing both sides of the nutritional energy equation. This paradigm allows the food and drinks industry to deflect its contributory responsibility for the epidemic and to avoid more stringent regulatory intervention beyond existing self-regulatory and corporate social responsibility regimes. This article argues that the industry must bear shared responsibility for the extent of the obesity crisis, although it cannot bear sole responsibility It defends the public interest case for more invasive, government-led regulation, reframing the crisis as one of public not individual burdens. Mindful of the political risk associated with unfocused calls for regulatory intervention, it articulates a set of regulatory principles to ensure that the interests of consumers and industry are properly acknowledged prior to further regulatory intervention. Finally, the article clarifies the subject, object and content of possible regulatory initiatives, offering an evaluation of their efficacy, practicality and fairness.
澳大利亚政府对“保姆国家”家长式作风的指控很敏感,支持这样一种学说,即对抗肥胖是个人责任问题。政策制定者认可预防肥胖的“整体”方法,旨在管理营养能量等式的双方。这种模式使食品和饮料行业能够推卸其对肥胖流行的促成责任,并避免在现有自我监管和企业社会责任制度之外进行更严格的监管干预。本文认为,该行业必须对肥胖危机的程度承担共同责任,尽管不能承担全部责任。它为更具侵入性的、政府主导的监管的公共利益案例进行辩护,将危机重新定义为公共负担而非个人负担。考虑到无重点的监管干预呼吁带来的政治风险,它阐明了一套监管原则,以确保在进一步监管干预之前,消费者和行业的利益得到适当承认。最后,本文阐明了可能的监管举措的主体、客体和内容,对其有效性、实用性和公平性进行了评估。