Policy Briefs and Reports
Reports
- Bellagio Conference on Law, Nutrition & Obesity
- Focus Groups with Parents: What Do They Think about Food Marketing to Their Kids?
- Food and Addiction Conference
- Food Marketing and Social Media: Findings from Fast Food FACTS and Sugary Drink FACTS
- Food Marketing to Children and Adolescents: What Do Parents Think?, October 2012
- Public Perceptions of Food Marketing to Youth: Results of the Rudd Center Public Opinion Poll, May 2008
- Trends in Television Food Advertising to Young People: 2010 Update
- Trends in Television Food Advertising to Young People: 2011 Update
- Trends in Television Food Advertising: Progress in Reducing Unhealthy Marketing to Young People?
- Where Children and Adolescents View Food and Beverage Ads on TV: Exposure by Channel and Program
Policy Briefs
- Accessing Nutrition Information at Chain Restaurants
- Improving School Food Standards: The Positive Impact on Revenue
- Local School Wellness Policies: How Are Schools Implementing the Congressional Mandate? Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Brief
- Menu Labeling in Chain Restaurants: Opportunities for Public Policy
- Reclaiming the Family Table: Mealtimes and Child Health and Wellbeing
- School Food: Opportunities for Improvement
- School Wellness Policies
- Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Taxes
- Weight Bias: A Social Justice Issue
Amicus Briefs
- California Restaurant Association v. San Francisco (July 2008) Filed in support of San Francisco, focusing on free speech
- New York State Restaurant Association v. New York City et al. (May 2008) Filed in the Second Circuit in support of the New York City defendants on the First Amendment challenge by the NYSRA
- New York Statewide Coalition of Hispanic Chambers of Commerce et al. v. The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene et al. (November 2012) Filed in support of the New York City defendants, with Peter D. Jacobson, Public Health Law Association; Lawrence O. Gostin, O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University; ChangeLab Solutions; Public Health Law Center at William Mitchell College of Law; and National Association of Local Boards of Health
