Submitting Institution
Cardiff UniversityUnit of Assessment
Architecture, Built Environment and PlanningSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Public Health and Health Services
Summary of the impact
This research furnished evidence for school food reform in the UK, Italy,
the USA and developing countries. Examining the pioneering experience of
school food reformers in Europe, North America and Africa, the research
showed that the power of public purchase can transform the quality of
school food. The researchers demonstrated that the most important factor
behind successful reform is a political culture that prioritizes the
values of sustainability over price and cost-cutting concerns. This
insight shaped the creation of the Food for Life programme, which
has been implemented in over 4,000 UK schools. Furthermore, the research
has influenced international public food policies, such as those of the
United Nations. In recognition of these achievements, the research in this
case study recently won the Economic and Social Research Council's Celebrating
Impact Prize for outstanding impact on public policy.
Underpinning research
The underpinning research was based on two projects:
(i) an ESRC-funded project that examined the procurement of healthy
school food in Italy, the UK and the USA;
(ii) a project funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, in
conjunction with the UN's World Food Programme, which concentrated on low
income countries. The primary focus of the research was the power of
public procurement and the regulatory, political and cultural factors that
shaped the way it was designed and deployed.
The key insights of the ESRC research were the following:
-
Regulatory regime: the reform of public procurement regulations
in the EU raised the status of sustainability criteria in the awarding
of public catering contracts, allowing public bodies to procure higher
quality and more locally-produced food than had been the case hitherto
(Morgan and Sonnino, 2008).
-
National diversity: the national interplay of culture and
politics was found to be the main reason as to why member states
interpreted EU regulations differently. Italy and the UK interpreted
"best value" in radically different ways because of the different
cultural values they attached to food — intrinsically significant in
Italy, where the school meal was meant to provide for children's health
and educational needs; instrumentally significant in the UK, where
school food was not seen as integral to children's education (Morgan and
Sonnino, 2007; Sonnino, 2009).
-
Public procurement: the research demonstrated that in the UK
and the USA the power of purchase is in practice hindered by a number of
barriers, principally: legal uncertainty as to what is permissible under
EU/Federal procurement regulations; a consumer culture that commends
quantity over quality in food choice/provision; and a low-cost catering
culture that is biased towards "cheap food" options (Morgan and Sonnino,
2008). In developing countries, the research showed that public
procurement failed to calibrate demand and supply of local and
nutritious food due to the inadequacy of the governance structure and an
unrealistic timeline chosen for the reform process (Morgan, 2010).
-
Value for money: the research showed that "value for money" is
a highly contested concept that needs to be based on a metric of whole
life cost, rather than low upfront cost (Morgan, 2008).
-
Power of purchase: creative public procurement requires a
supportive political milieu and a professional climate in which
procurement officers have the confidence and competence to internalise
health and environmental costs in their public contracts (Sonnino,
2010).
-
Diffusing good practice: the research showed that more
effective diffusion mechanisms of social learning are needed in the
public sector (where performance is highly variable) if good practice is
to become the norm, rather than the exception (Morgan, 2008).
The significance of the research stemmed from the fact that it coincided
with public outrage (as seen by protesting parents, media coverage) about
food insecurity and childhood obesity. This gave the research a high
political prominence and robustness because it was based on a new and
solid evidence base that examined school food reform in a comparative
perspective.
The key researchers involved in this body of research (which was carried
out in the period 2005- 2009) were Kevin Morgan and Roberta Sonnino,
respectively Professor and Reader in the School of Planning and Geography
at Cardiff University.
References to the research
Key academic publications include:
1) Morgan, K. J. (2010) Local and Green, Global and Fair: the
Ethical Foodscape and the Politics of Care. Environment and Planning A
42(8) 1852 - 1867. Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a42364
2) Sonnino, R. (2010) Escaping the Local Trap: Insights on
Re-localization from School Food Reform. Journal of Environmental Policy
and Planning, 12 (1): 23-40. Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15239080903220120
3) Sonnino, R. (2009) Quality Food, Public Procurement and
Sustainable Development: The School Meal Revolution in Rome. Environment
and Planning A, 41(2) 425 - 440. Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a40112
4) Morgan, K.J. and Sonnino, R. (2008) The School Food
Revolution: Public Food and the Challenge of Sustainable Development.
London: Earthscan. ISBN: 9781844074822
Details of the impact
At a time when obesity affects one in seven children, according to the
NHS, the research resonated with a wide audience of policy-makers and
professional practitioners. This was due in large part to the results
being broadcast internationally through a robust dissemination strategy,
which included 60 conferences (including the UN) in 16 countries. For
example, the Sustainable Food Cities conference (2011) had over 500
delegates, including practitioners from 20 UK cities and 15 NGOs. The
dissemination strategy also involved extensive engagement with influential
national and international media organisations, including BBC, which in
2011 conferred the Radio 4 Food and Farming Award to the Food for Life
Partnership (FFLP) [1], a five-year programme, established by the Soil
Association in 2007, which was heavily influenced by the research. As
stated by Helen Browning, the Chief Executive of the Soil Association:
"Cardiff University's collation and analysis of international good
practice case studies has helped us to visualise better school food
services, impacting directly on our own programme of school food
transformation through the Food for Life programme" [2]. Funded through a
£ 16.9 million grant from the Big Lottery and involving four charities,
the FFLP is the most transformative school food programme in Europe. It is
currently being implemented in more than 4,300 English schools, reaching
over 500,000 children, and preliminary results show that the initiative
has made a genuine difference, especially as regards the number of primary
school children eating 5-a-day. Dr. Sonnino's invited participation in the
Soil Associations' Catering Mark Standards Committee since 2011 will
ensure that the Cardiff team's expertise continues to support this
important reform effort in the UK.
In Wales, the research was `very valuable and relevant' to the
government's reform of the national school food policy, Appetite for
Life, according to Jane Hutt, the Welsh Government's Finance
Minister. [3] Morgan and Sonnino were invited to serve on school food
reform task forces in Wales (2008) and Scotland (2009) and to be part of
the team that designed and wrote the first National Food Strategy for
Wales in 2010 — a document commissioned by the Welsh Government to make
the national food system more sustainable. Professional practitioners (in
Carmarthenshire, East Ayrshire, Greenwich and Rome) have used the research
to introduce new criteria into their public contracting processes to
ensure that sustainability criteria are allotted parity of esteem with
more conventional economic criteria - the first step in the transition to
a more sustainable school food system. [4]
In Scotland, the research was instrumental in translating local good
practice into national policy through the direct participation of Dr.
Sonnino in the task force that designed the national food and drink policy
— Walking the Talk — Getting Government Right (2009). The adviser
on Food Policy from the Food, Drink & Rural Communities Division of
the Scottish Government, Robin Gourlay, wrote, "Morgan and Sonnino's ESRC
funded research continues to be a vitally important touchstone in my work
as it is in many spheres for practitioners involved in sustainable
procurement, community planning, health and education." [5]
Morgan and Sonnino were invited to address two sessions of the United
Nations, when it convened the Seventeenth Session of its Commission on
Sustainable Development (4-15 May 2009), where member countries and NGOs
assembled to discuss the design and delivery of sustainable food systems.
As a result of these sessions, the researchers were invited to both
Zimbabwe and Kenya to discuss the promotion of food security through
stronger urban-rural linkages. [6] The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) has
drawn extensively on the research to inform its own creative procurement
programme - Purchase for Progress. [7] In 2012, WFP bought US$1.1
billion worth of food to feed more than 90 million people.
Furthermore, the research `strongly contributed to the conceiving and
rethinking of programmes such as the Home Grown School Feeding
(HGSF),' according to the WFP, which had formed a partnership with the
Gates Foundation to commission the researchers to deliver a study of HGSF.
[8] This allowed the Cardiff team to engage with policy-makers and
practitioners in low and medium income countries (principally Brazil,
Ghana and South Africa) that were reforming school food systems. [9]
Findings from this research were discussed in a World Bank Report: Rethinking
School Feeding. As a result of this, Sonnino was invited to
participate in a high-profile workshop in London (January 2012) on
`building the evidence-base for school feeding policies' - sponsored and
organized by the World Health Organization, the School Food Trust and the
World Bank. [10]
Based on these impacts and the extensive engagement of the researchers
with policy-makers and practitioners, in 2013 Morgan and Sonnino were
awarded the Economic and Social Research Council's Celebrating Impact
Prize for outstanding impact on public policy. This is the first
ever award given to an ESRC-funded project of outstanding social impact,
and the competition was extremely strong, with more than 30 applications
received for the public policy category. The researchers were invited to a
high-profile award ceremony, held in London in May 2013, which received a
wide coverage on a range of scientific and government web sites. The Prize
has been designed to further enhance the impact of the research; as a
first initiative, it will support Sonnino's travelling to the Negev region
in December 2013 to provide advice on an Israeli-Palestinian collaborative
initiative on procurement and sustainable local development.
Sources to corroborate the impact
Key references:
- BBC (2011) http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b017ckf7
confirms award to Food for Life
- Soil Association (Food for Life Partnership): A letter from the Chief
Executive of the Soil Association confirms the Soil Association's use of
the research findings
- National Assembly for Wales (2012) Sustainable Public Sector Food
Procurement: A letter from the Former Minister for Education, Welsh
Government (2007-9) confirms the impact of the research on Welsh
Government's policy approach
- Local Government Information Unit Magazine February 2011 http://www.lgiu.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Cllr-magazine-Feb-2011.pdf
confirms relevance of the research in Scotland for other local
government in the UK
- Scottish Executive: A letter from the Advisor on Food Policy, Scottish
Government confirms the impact of the research on Scottish policy
- Seventeenth Session of the UN's Commission on Sustainable Development,
4-15 May 2009 http://www.iisd.ca/csd/csd17/5may.htm
confirms researchers' invitation to share research findings on public
procurement and rural-urban linkages
- World Food Programme, 2013 State of School Feeding Worldwide http://documents.wfp.org/stellent/groups/public/documents/communications/wfp257481.pdf
confirms impact of the research on WFP's policy
- World Food Programme (School Feeding Unit): http://www.schoolsandhealth.org/Documents/Linking%20school%20feeding%20with%20agricultur
e%20development.pdf
confirms impact of the research on Home-Grown School Feeding programme
- Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations: http://www.fao.org/fcit/meetingevents/wuf6-naples/events/a-conversation-about-linking-farmers-to-
local-buyers-opportunities-challenges-and-successes/en/
confirms researchers' engagement with policy-makers and practitioners at
the UN level
- World Bank (2009) Rethinking
School Feeding: Social Safety Nets, Child Development, and the
Education Sector. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank
confirms impact of the research on World Bank's approach to school
feeding