U of M launches the Food Policy Research Center to inform policy through comprehensive science approach

News Summary

  • Faculty and staff members of four University of Minnesota schools and colleges have created an all-university Food Policy Research Center (FPRC).
  • The FPRC is designed to provide policymakers and consumers a better, more complete view of food policy options through the examination of scientific data and existing policy information.
  • Led by University of Minnesota professor Will Hueston, D.V.M., Ph.D., the FPRC is comprised of food policy subject matter experts from the College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Humphrey School of Public Affairs and School of Public Health.

Quotes

  • “Analysts tend to look at food policy from one angle – the angle that represents their individual expertise – and it’s hard to see anything else. As integrated policy research teams, we’ll be working together from all sides to form a more holistic review of food and nutrition policy.” - Will Hueston, D.V.M., Ph.D.
  • “We want to impact policymakers at the capital and consumers in the kitchen. Our findings will impact complex policy decisions by lawmakers and shed light on the confusion people face when making food decisions for their families.” - Will Hueston, D.V.M., Ph.D.
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Full Text

Faculty and staff members of four University of Minnesota schools and colleges have joined together for the first time to create an all-university Food Policy Research Center (FPRC). The effort is designed to provide policymakers and consumers a better, more complete and holistic view of food policy options through the examination of scientific data and existing policy information.

Led by University of Minnesota professor Will Hueston, D.V.M., Ph.D., the FPRC is comprised of food policy subject matter experts from the College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Humphrey School of Public Affairs and School of Public Health.
Within the FPRC, these experts will capitalize on their combined perspectives to analyze food and nutrition policies affecting farmers, food processors and consumers while leveraging initiatives in health and sustainability.

“Analysts tend to look at food policy from one angle – the angle that represents their individual expertise – and it’s hard to see anything else,” said Hueston. “As integrated policy research teams, we’ll be working together from all sides to form a more holistic review of food and nutrition policy.”

The primary goal of the FPRC is to better inform policymakers and consumers of the effects and trade-offs associated with local and national food policy including legislation and regulations. Pulling together current science and expertise from across the University of Minnesota will allow the FPRC to help inform and develop a more robust analysis of policy, while also strengthening educational programs related to food and nutrition policy.

“We want to impact policymakers at the capital and consumers in the kitchen,” said Hueston. “Our findings will impact complex policy decisions by lawmakers and shed light on the confusion people face when making food decisions for their families.”

To support the effort, the College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences will provide background on food production and processing issues, the College of Veterinary Medicine will lend expertise on food safety issues involving animal and animal products, the Humphrey School of Public Affairs will provide input on how society manages food-related policies, and the School of Public Health will focus on consumer health.

From this combined knowledge base, integrated faculty and staff policy research teams will assess food and nutrition policy issues ranging from the school lunch program and food processing technology to trade agreements and the impacts of farming practices on the environment and the economy.

To ensure this holistic approach continues, the FPRC’s education program will train the next generation of analysts to approach food policy from biological, public health, environmental and economic perspectives.

“By exposing students from four University of Minnesota schools and colleges to the integrated efforts of the FPRC, they will be better prepared to work together to synthesize policy information,” said Hueston.

The FPRC is funded by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, which also supports four other related centers: Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, Iowa State University; Center for Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization - Policy Research Group, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; National Agricultural and Rural Development Policy Center, Pennsylvania State University; and Partnership for Agricultural and Resource Policy Research, University of California, Davis, and Oregon State University.

More information on the FPRC can be found on their website at www.foodpolicy.umn.edu.


  • About the Food Policy Research Center


    The University of Minnesota Food Policy Research Center (FPRC) leverages the expertise of four university schools and colleges, as well as 20 participating centers and institutes, to perform integrated analyses of food and nutrition policies. Through its analyses, the center aims to provide consumers and policy makers with more comprehensive, holistic food policy options. The FPRC launched in April 2012 with funding from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, United States Department of Agriculture.Visit the FPRC website at www.foodpolicy.umn.edu.


Contact Information

Justin Paquette
Asst. Director of Public Relations

Caroline Marin
Media Relations Coordinator
612-624-5680

Laurel Herold
PR Coordinator
612-624-2449

Matt DePoint
PR Coordinator
612-625-4110

Miranda Taylor
Communications Associate
612-626-2767

Voices of the FPRC

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"I think the key to the Food Policy Research Center for us is that it helps provide a linkage with the science-related issues of policy. It’s a good interdisciplinary research collaboration to have, and we'll be developing the next generation of students to look at food safety, health and animal welfare issues." - Brian Buhr, Ph.D., College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences.

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"Historically, we have done well training veterinarian scientists who promote both animal and human health as both scientists and medical professionals. Rarely, however, have our students also been experienced in the food policy decision process. The FPRC gives us a structure in which to engage our students in the process by which policies are drafted and implemented." - Mark Rutherford, Ph.D., College of Veterinary Medicine

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"The FPRC is important to the Humphrey School because society’s goal of feeding the world raises profound policy issues, ranging from governance of emerging technologies such as genetically modified organisms to providing food for the world's poor at reasonable prices. How we address and resolve these issues requires the work of the best minds in the policy field." - Greg Lindsey, Ph.D., Humphrey School of Public Affairs

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"The FPRC is important to our school because it builds on partnerships we’ve been working to build, and the FPRC has the potential to expand beyond the domestic sphere to the global one, because, frankly, we have a global food supply. Food is very much something people do. They eat. A more comprehensive view of food is a good thing to be a part of. It’s a real chance to participate in innovative work for food policy." - Beth Virnig, Ph.D., School of Public Health

 

 

 

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