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Christine Parker

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  162
Citations -  3224

Christine Parker is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Enforcement & Legal profession. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 154 publications receiving 2984 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine Parker include University of New South Wales & Monash University, Clayton campus.

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Voting with Your Fork? Industrial Free-Range Eggs and the Regulatory Construction of Consumer Choice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that choices available to consumers are constructed and constrained by actors in the chains of production, distribution, and exchange who bring products to retail, and they trace how free-range eggs come to market in Australia, finding that the "industrial freerange" label dominating the market is not substantially different from caged-egg production in the way that it addresses animal welfare, public health, and agro-ecological values.
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Understanding the Political Challenge of Red and Processed Meat Reduction for Healthy and Sustainable Food Systems: A Narrative Review of the Literature.

TL;DR: A theoretically-guided narrative review found there are a number of political challenges related to RPM reduction that contribute to policy inertia, and hence are likely to impede the transformation of food systems.
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To what extent do third parties influence business compliance

TL;DR: This article examined the extent to which businesses' worries about, and perceptions of pressure from, various third parties influence their internal compliance management activities and moral commitment in relation to complying with the objectives of competition and consumer protection law.
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Promoting a healthier, younger you: The media marketing of anti-ageing superfoods:

TL;DR: The growing availability of products labelled'superfoods' has been a major marketing success story as mentioned in this paper. But little scientific evidence supports the claims regarding the health-enhancing, age-defying...
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Deterrence and the Impact of Calculative Thinking on Business Compliance with Competition and Consumer Regulation

TL;DR: A number of countries including Australia have recently drastically increased the sanctions available for cartel conduct, on the assumption that businesses make decisions about their regulatory decisions as mentioned in this paper, which is not always the case.