4.6 Article

Mapping Sustainable Diets: A Comparison of Sustainability References in Dietary Guidelines of Swiss Food Governance Actors

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su132112076

Keywords

sustainable diet; sustainable dietary guidelines; qualitative content analysis; sustainable food systems; food governance

Funding

  1. Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences [315]
  2. Sustainability Research Group of the University of Basel
  3. University of Basel for Open Access
  4. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant through the SSPH+ Global PhD Fellowship Programme in Public Health Sciences (GlobalP3HS) of the Swiss School of Public Health [801076]

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This paper analyzes how different state and non-state actors in Switzerland incorporate sustainability aspects in their dietary guidelines, finding that all guidelines explicitly include sustainability aspects and each stakeholder covers specific niches of sustainability, leading to a discussion on the transformative role of non-state actors in developing sustainable dietary concepts.
With the growing recognition of the food system for a transformation toward sustainability, there is a need for future guidance on food consumption and policy. In particular, dietary guidelines (DGs) have received increasing attention as potential tools for enabling transformative change. This paper analyzes how and to what extent different state and non-state actors in Switzerland incorporate sustainability aspects in their dietary guidelines. It examines how these DGs account for different dimensions at the basis of sustainability thinking, including the classic environmental, economic, and social dimensions as well as issues of health and governance. Our analysis shows the explicit inclusion of sustainability aspects in all DGs of the chosen actors in Switzerland, addressing at least one sustainability category predominantly. Through the analysis of the different stakeholders, different areas of focus become apparent, with each stakeholder covering specific niches of sustainability. On this basis, the transformative role of non-state actors in developing the concept of sustainable diets is discussed.

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