Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, 3rd Floor, Teaching Research and Wellness Building, 3280 Hospital Drive N.W, Calgary, AB, T2N 4Z6, Canada.
School of Health Administration, Faculty of Health, Dalhousie University, 5850 College Street, Tupper Building, 2nd Floor, PO Box 15000, Halifax, NS, B3H 4R2, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2019 Jan;220:176-183. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.11.016. Epub 2018 Nov 10.
Household food insecurity (HFI), lack of access to adequate food due to financial constraint, has been studied extensively in Canada and is well-recognized for its negative impacts on population health. Despite considerable high-level political recognition, the issue has evoked little substantive policy deliberation. We suggest that Béland and Cox's recently articulated construct of 'valence' may be useful in examining why the idea of HFI has motivated little policy response. Valence is defined as the emotional quality of an idea. According to valence theory, ideas with a high emotional intensity, positive valence acquire importance in policy debate, and those with high intensity, negative valence are 'unthinkable' as a policy idea. We compiled four datasets in which HFI was discussed (verbatim legislative excerpts, parliamentary committee proceedings, government reports, interviews with HFI policy entrepreneurs), representing different kinds of political forums for debate. We analyzed what was said with respect to the valence of the idea of HFI. We found that discussions about HFI were on the whole generally subdued and of low emotional intensity. High intensity negative valence pronouncements were found among legislators' statements and parliamentary committee evidence. Regardless of emotional intensity level, speakers usually talked about the idea of HFI in ways that elicited a negative valence. Positive valence in discussion of the idea of HFI was limited and invoked comments about individual aspiration, prosperity, and community spirit. Our findings suggest that the negative valence of HFI is an inherent trait of the idea that makes it unattractive to policy makers. We suggest that HFI may be a better metric than a policy problem and that aspirational goals with positive valence related to poverty alleviation might better use HFI as an outcome rather than the focus of action.
家庭粮食不安全(HFI),由于经济限制而无法获得足够的食物,在加拿大已经进行了广泛的研究,并且其对人口健康的负面影响已得到充分认识。尽管高层政治上有相当多的认可,但这个问题几乎没有引起实质性的政策讨论。我们认为,Beland 和 Cox 最近提出的“价值”概念可能有助于解释为什么 HFI 的概念没有引起太多的政策反应。价值是指一个想法的情感质量。根据价值理论,具有高强度情感的积极价值的想法在政策辩论中具有重要意义,而具有高强度情感的消极价值的想法则是“不可想象的”,不可能成为政策想法。我们编制了四个数据集,其中讨论了 HFI(逐字逐句的立法摘录、议会委员会程序、政府报告、与 HFI 政策企业家的访谈),代表了不同类型的政治论坛进行辩论。我们分析了与 HFI 想法的价值有关的说法。我们发现,关于 HFI 的讨论总体上较为温和,情感强度较低。在立法者的声明和议会委员会的证据中发现了高强度的负面价值声明。无论情感强度水平如何,演讲者通常以引发负面价值的方式谈论 HFI 的想法。HFI 想法的讨论中,积极价值是有限的,并援引了关于个人愿望、繁荣和社区精神的评论。我们的研究结果表明,HFI 的负面价值是该想法固有的特征,使其对政策制定者没有吸引力。我们认为,HFI 可能是一个比政策问题更好的衡量标准,并且与减轻贫困相关的积极价值的目标可能会更好地将 HFI 用作结果而不是行动的重点。