Genetically Modified Food Labeling in China: In Pursuit of a Rational Path (with Xiao Zhu and Kajie Wu), 71 Food and Drug Law Journal 30 (2016).
In short, the text is a novel approach to international food law and should serve as a useful start and framework for an introductory course on international food law. The text also will be a good guide to practitioners who wish to address a specific topic or who are simply looking for context in which to evaluate a particular issue or line of thought. Finally, the text will be an important resource and benchmark for scholars who wish to explore law and policy topics related to food and the problems of the modern global food system.
The Resnick Center for Food Law and Policy and the Los Angeles Food Policy Council actively follow Los Angeles food policy actions. In this Los Angeles Food Policy Tracker 2018, substantial policy actions undertaken at both the City and County level are identified. Specifically, the tracker documents policies that were adopted, administratively closed, or are currently pending during the time period from January 1, 2017 to July 1, 2018. The tracker is divided into three sections: City of Los Angeles, County of Los Angeles, and Los Angeles Unified School District.
American Journal of Law & Medicine, 44 (2018): 489-506
A "Food Systems Thinking" Roadmap for Policymakers and Retailers to Save the Ecosystem by Saving the Endangered Honey Producer from the Devastating Consequences of Honey Fraud
This White Paper recognizes how complicated the food supply chain is and how difficult it can be for stakeholders to see the big picture. This challenge is particularly true when it comes to the problem of the endangered US honey producer via honey fraud in the United States.
Reviewed by Diana R. H. Winters (2019) Outbreak: Foodborne Illness and the Struggle for Food Safety, Journal of Legal Medicine, 39:4, 443-445, DOI: 10.1080/01947648.2019.1696108
Winters reviewed Timothy D. Lytton’s 2019 book, Outbreak: Foodborne Illness and the Struggle for Food Safety. In Outbreak, Lytton, a Professor of Law at Georgia State University School of Law, explores the history and development of food safety regulation in the United States and looks at food safety governance as a complex adaptive system.
Science report scandal could lead to lawsuits that hold sugary beverage industry accountable, NY Daily News (2016)
Held at UCLA School of Law on April 15, 2016, Imagining the Legal Landscape was a day of vibrant, wide-ranging, interdisciplinary discussion about the future of law and technology. Each participant prepared a short essay imagining a future scientific or technological change that will have meaningful legal implications by 2030. Participants then discussed these future issues together throughout the day. Topics ranged from big data to robotic police, from offspring selection to virtual reality, from perfect surveillance to total life recording devices.
59 UCLA L. Rev. 1124 (2012)