School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home. / Andersen, Sidse Schoubye; Holm, Lotte; Baarts, Charlotte.

In: Social Science Information, Vol. 54, No. 3, 10.08.2015, p. 394-416.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Andersen, SS, Holm, L & Baarts, C 2015, 'School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home.', Social Science Information, vol. 54, no. 3, pp. 394-416. https://doi.org/10.1177/0539018415584697

APA

Andersen, S. S., Holm, L., & Baarts, C. (2015). School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home. Social Science Information, 54(3), 394-416. https://doi.org/10.1177/0539018415584697

Vancouver

Andersen SS, Holm L, Baarts C. School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home. Social Science Information. 2015 Aug 10;54(3):394-416. https://doi.org/10.1177/0539018415584697

Author

Andersen, Sidse Schoubye ; Holm, Lotte ; Baarts, Charlotte. / School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home. In: Social Science Information. 2015 ; Vol. 54, No. 3. pp. 394-416.

Bibtex

@article{6fa7c9773d664648a110c21e0a56ec4b,
title = "School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism?: Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home.",
abstract = "The present article specifies and broadens our understanding of the concept of commensality by investigating what it means to {\textquoteleft}share a meal{\textquoteright}. The study utilizes a school meal intervention carried out in Denmark in 2011/2012. It shows how different types of school meal arrangement influence the social life of a school class, and how these arrangements involve strategies of both inclusion and exclusion. Two types of school meals are compared in the intervention study: a hot meal based on Nordic ingredients and the normal Danish school meal arrangement in which children bring lunch packs to school. The study discusses commensality by examining and comparing lunchtime interactions within the same group of children in the two contrasting meal situations. The results fail to confirm the conventional view that shared meals have greater social impacts and benefits than eating individualized foods. The article argues that the social entrepreneurship involved in sharing individual lunch packs might even outweigh some of the benefits of shared meals where everyone is served the same food.",
keywords = "Former LIFE faculty, commensality, Culture, Eating, Food, Individualization, Meals, Social, sharing, commensality, culture , eating , food , individualization , meals , social , sharing",
author = "Andersen, {Sidse Schoubye} and Lotte Holm and Charlotte Baarts",
year = "2015",
month = aug,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1177/0539018415584697",
language = "English",
volume = "54",
pages = "394--416",
journal = "Social Science Information",
issn = "0539-0184",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism?

T2 - Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home.

AU - Andersen, Sidse Schoubye

AU - Holm, Lotte

AU - Baarts, Charlotte

PY - 2015/8/10

Y1 - 2015/8/10

N2 - The present article specifies and broadens our understanding of the concept of commensality by investigating what it means to ‘share a meal’. The study utilizes a school meal intervention carried out in Denmark in 2011/2012. It shows how different types of school meal arrangement influence the social life of a school class, and how these arrangements involve strategies of both inclusion and exclusion. Two types of school meals are compared in the intervention study: a hot meal based on Nordic ingredients and the normal Danish school meal arrangement in which children bring lunch packs to school. The study discusses commensality by examining and comparing lunchtime interactions within the same group of children in the two contrasting meal situations. The results fail to confirm the conventional view that shared meals have greater social impacts and benefits than eating individualized foods. The article argues that the social entrepreneurship involved in sharing individual lunch packs might even outweigh some of the benefits of shared meals where everyone is served the same food.

AB - The present article specifies and broadens our understanding of the concept of commensality by investigating what it means to ‘share a meal’. The study utilizes a school meal intervention carried out in Denmark in 2011/2012. It shows how different types of school meal arrangement influence the social life of a school class, and how these arrangements involve strategies of both inclusion and exclusion. Two types of school meals are compared in the intervention study: a hot meal based on Nordic ingredients and the normal Danish school meal arrangement in which children bring lunch packs to school. The study discusses commensality by examining and comparing lunchtime interactions within the same group of children in the two contrasting meal situations. The results fail to confirm the conventional view that shared meals have greater social impacts and benefits than eating individualized foods. The article argues that the social entrepreneurship involved in sharing individual lunch packs might even outweigh some of the benefits of shared meals where everyone is served the same food.

KW - Former LIFE faculty

KW - commensality

KW - Culture

KW - Eating

KW - Food

KW - Individualization

KW - Meals

KW - Social

KW - sharing

KW - commensality

KW - culture

KW - eating

KW - food

KW - individualization

KW - meals

KW - social

KW - sharing

U2 - 10.1177/0539018415584697

DO - 10.1177/0539018415584697

M3 - Journal article

VL - 54

SP - 394

EP - 416

JO - Social Science Information

JF - Social Science Information

SN - 0539-0184

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 138218207