Environment Control Measures Through Policies.
The policies and strategies in controlling the environment and advertisement strategies that help in the same are standard. In the attempt to control environmental pollution, countries like France have devised policies that control pollution cases. The prices on the goods involved in using unrecycled material plastic packaging are charged high prices in the taxes (Prata, et al. 2019). They have also imposed bans on the companies and businesses that use plastic cutlery and plates made of plastic. Some countries like Spain have devised ways to control pollution by reducing air pollution cases through fuel decomposition. In this attempt, they have advocated for the policies on using cars where they have areas. The policies and regulations have a positive effect as the cases of pollution have reduced in the countries that have imposed the measures as the community also understands the practice's need.
The advertisement on the food has been reduced by the government policies in various countries to protect the children from cases of obesity as a strategy prevention measure. The case is represented statutory measures that restrict food advertisement and marketing as unhealthy food marketing. The food advertisement is restricted for children to ensure they practice healthy food uptakes and behaviours that can lead to cases of obesity as an influence from an advertisement of unhealthy foods (Taillie, et al. 2019). The policies have taken root in sixteen countries where the advertisement on food is not made during the children program to reduce the exposure. The setting is more effective in school, where the restrictions can best take place as the environment is easy to control. In exposure reduction, the food marketing design is used as the most effective means to control the media's food advertisement all over to reduce and enable healthy food marketing.
The policy's development in protecting children in Canada and Sweden, and Norway has been an issue. The advertisement made to attract children under the age of twelve years is considered illegal in the country (Veloso, Hildebrand, & Sresnewsky, 2017). To reduce the advertisement effects on the children, the government has put on the policy to ensure that children are not exposed to unhealthy adverts. The policy has been influential in controlling foods and other substance adverts that are directly advertised for the children, like toys that are done to attract children. The cases have been influential in controlling these activities, especially on the television's peak hours, which has shown an effect in controlling materials that can harm the children in all ways.
In controlling the consumption that harms the human, they are taxed high price to discourage consumption. Cases on the advertisement are directed to high taxes to ensure that they do not advertise the commodity on the television. The adverts' charges are meant to subsidize the things that the government wants to encourage in their consumption and discourage those that the government wan less (Rehm, et al. 2020). High price taxation is taxed for the food substances and beverages that are destructive to humans and the environment. The advertisement is meant to restrict alcohol consumption with minimum consumption age where the underage is restricted. The policies are responsible for restricting driving after alcohol consumption to show the alcohol's effect on one’s state of mind, where the punishment includes imprisonment and car confiscation.
The control of society and the content that the people are exposed to should be regulated to ensure a healthy environment. Imposing the policy is the only way the community can practice the measures on both the environment and the people's food and drinks. To protect the children from harmful advertisement, the government has the right to protect the next generation from extinction from junk foods.
References
Prata, J. C., Silva, A. L. P., Da Costa, J. P., Mouneyrac, C., Walker, T. R., Duarte, A. C., & Rocha-Santos, T. (2019). Solutions and integrated strategies for the control and mitigation of plastic and microplastic pollution. International journal of environmental research and public health, 16(13), 2411.
Rehm, J., Manthey, J., Lange, S., Badaras, R., Zurlyte, I., Passmore, J., ... & Štelemėkas, M. (2020). Alcohol control policy and changes in alcohol‐related traffic harm. Addiction, 115(4), 655-665.
Taillie, L. S., Busey, E., Stoltze, F. M., & Dillman Carpentier, F. R. (2019). Governmental policies to reduce unhealthy food marketing to children. Nutrition reviews, 77(11), 787-816.
Veloso, A. R., Hildebrand, D., & Sresnewsky, K. B. G. B. (2017). Online advertising disclaimers in unregulated markets: use of disclaimers by multinational and local companies in the Brazilian toy industry. International Journal of Advertising, 36(6), 893-909.