Supersizing Urban America: How Inner Cities Got Fast Food with Government Help

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, Mar 15, 2017 - History - 279 pages
More than one-third of adults in the United States are obese. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that there are over 112,000 obesity-related deaths annually, and for many years, the government has waged a very public war on the problem. Former Surgeon General Richard Carmona warned in 2006 that “obesity is the terror within,” going so far as to call it a threat that will “dwarf 9/11.”
 
What doesn’t get mentioned in all this? The fact that the federal government helped create the obesity crisis in the first place—especially where it is strikingly acute, among urban African-American communities. Supersizing Urban America reveals the little-known story of how the U.S. government got into the business of encouraging fast food in inner cities, with unforeseen consequences we are only beginning to understand. Chin Jou begins her story in the late 1960s, when predominantly African-American neighborhoods went from having no fast food chain restaurants to being littered with them. She uncovers the federal policies that have helped to subsidize that expansion, including loan guarantees to fast food franchisees, programs intended to promote minority entrepreneurship, and urban revitalization initiatives. During this time, fast food companies also began to relentlessly market to urban African-American consumers. An unintended consequence of these developments was that low-income minority communities were disproportionately affected by the obesity epidemic.

?In the first book about the U.S. government’s problematic role in promoting fast food in inner-city America, Jou tells a riveting story of the food industry, obesity, and race relations in America that is essential to understanding health and obesity in contemporary urban America.
 

Contents

Introduction Combating Obesity and Subsidizing Fast Food Expansion
1
One Solving Urban Challenges Through Fast Food
19
Two Searching for New Urban Markets
39
Three Creating Fast Food Cities with Government Help
61
Four Diversifying out of Necessity
93
Five Shoring Up the Urban Market
111
Six Making Sense of Recent Fast Food Policies
134
Seven Unpacking Links Between Fast Food and Obesity
149
Conclusion Proposing Solutions
165
Acknowledgments
177
Appendix
181
Notes
187
Index
251
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About the author (2017)

Chin Jou is a lecturer in American history at the University of Sydney. 
 

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