Abstract
This article describes a policy-driven project Marketing of unhealthy food directed to children, which represents the first extensive study of food and beverage advertising and marketing to children in Sweden. The project mapped out food and beverage advertisements directed to Swedish children to provide policymakers with current data about marketing trends to inform the debate concerning the regulation of food advertising in response to childhood obesity. The nature, number and placement of advertisements on television and in the internet that encourage children to buy food and beverages were surveyed during one week in 2005 and 2007. The article summarizes the TV and Internet study results, stakeholder views and public opinion, and discusses the policy implications of digital media and the marketing of unhealthy food and beverages to Swedish children.
© 2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Insights from journalists on the future of the press
- Communicative power is power over identity
- Strategic news frames and public policy debates: Press and television news coverage of the euro in the UK
- Can a charter of diversity make the difference in ethnic minority reporting? A comparative content and production analysis of two Flemish television newscasts
- Tiger talk and candy king: Marketing of unhealthy food and beverages to Swedish children
- The effects of verbal and nonverbal elements in persuasive communication: Findings from two multi-method experiments
- Book Reviews
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Insights from journalists on the future of the press
- Communicative power is power over identity
- Strategic news frames and public policy debates: Press and television news coverage of the euro in the UK
- Can a charter of diversity make the difference in ethnic minority reporting? A comparative content and production analysis of two Flemish television newscasts
- Tiger talk and candy king: Marketing of unhealthy food and beverages to Swedish children
- The effects of verbal and nonverbal elements in persuasive communication: Findings from two multi-method experiments
- Book Reviews