Abstract
This dissertation explores the role of different school meal arrangements in children’s social life from a child’s perspective. The dissertation utilizes a school meal intervention carried out in Denmark in 2011-12 to compare the same group of children in different school meal arrangements, thereby overcoming typical challenges of comparison across school meal arrangements, such as differences across children, schools or countries. The dissertation builds on data from a four month field work in 4th grade, 26 semi-structured interviews with children, chefs, and teachers, and 834 children’s self-reported evaluation of their school meals.
Three themes guide the analyses: commensality, liking, and food education. Through these themes, the dissertation explores how school meals shape social positions, relations and interactions between adults and children. The dissertation shows that peers are important in children’s evaluation of new food initiatives in school; that children meet conflicting approaches to food education depending on the context; and that the social powers of sharing and exchanging individual lunch packs could outweigh some of the benefits of a collective meal system. Overall, the dissertation directs attention to unforeseen social consequences of different school meal arrangements, and shows how school meals are not innocent; they shape and are shaped by children’s everyday life and altering school meals thus have important social consequences for children’s social life.
Three themes guide the analyses: commensality, liking, and food education. Through these themes, the dissertation explores how school meals shape social positions, relations and interactions between adults and children. The dissertation shows that peers are important in children’s evaluation of new food initiatives in school; that children meet conflicting approaches to food education depending on the context; and that the social powers of sharing and exchanging individual lunch packs could outweigh some of the benefits of a collective meal system. Overall, the dissertation directs attention to unforeseen social consequences of different school meal arrangements, and shows how school meals are not innocent; they shape and are shaped by children’s everyday life and altering school meals thus have important social consequences for children’s social life.
Original language | English |
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Publisher | Department of Food and Resource Economics, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen |
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Number of pages | 227 |
Publication status | Published - 2015 |