1. An investigation of structural violence in the lived experience of food insecurity.
- Author
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Lindberg, Rebecca, McKenzie, Hayley, Haines, Brontë, and McKay, Fiona H
- Subjects
DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,CHARITY ,TORRES Strait Islanders ,FOOD relief ,FOOD security ,RESEARCH methodology ,VIOLENCE ,INTERVIEWING ,COMMUNITY health services ,EXPERIENCE ,POVERTY areas ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,GOVERNMENT policy ,REFUGEES ,NATURAL disasters ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PUBLIC welfare ,THEMATIC analysis ,HOMELESSNESS ,VICTIMS ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
In Australia, like many high-income countries, food insecurity is associated with increased risks of chronic diseases, sub-optimal development outcomes in children, and mental health conditions including depression and anxiety. Food insecure households employ a range of strategies, including the use of food charity, to help alleviate hunger and meet cost of living pressures. The aim of this paper is to investigate the lived experience of food insecurity for welfare-dependent households, and to examine these experiences within a structural violence framework. Structural violence investigations seek to understand the distal causal factors that can help explain poor health patterns and inequities. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with customers (n = 78) of food pantries, soup kitchens, and community development programs (June 2018 to January 2019) in the state of Victoria, Australia. Thematic analysis established evidence of controlling, demeaning and depriving practices in the interactions between the participants and the services and staff at national welfare providers and food charities. The same providers and charities nominally set up to address the exact situations in which participants found themselves. The findings of this study suggest that food and social services are an on-the-ground setting through which structural violence is enacted and experienced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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