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Globalization, first-foods systems transformations and corporate power: a synthesis of literature and data on the market and political practices of the transnational baby food industry.

Phillip BakerKatheryn RussManho KangThiago M SantosPaulo A R NevesJulie SmithGillian KingstonMelissa MialonMark LawrenceBenjamin WoodRob MoodieDavid ClarkKatherine SievertMonique BoatwrightDavid McCoy
Published in: Globalization and health (2021)
The baby food industry uses integrated market and political strategies to shape first-foods systems in ways that drive and sustain milk formula market expansion, on a global scale. Such practices are a major impediment to global implementation of the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes, and other policy actions to protect, promote and support breastfeeding. New modalities of public health action are needed to negate the political practices of the industry in particular, and ultimately to constrain corporate power over the mother-child breastfeeding dyad.
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