Skip to content
Home page - The Prevention Centre

Primary menu

  • About us
    • Our vision and mission
    • Our approach
    • Our partners
    • Our structure and governance
  • About prevention
    • What is prevention?
    • What are the benefits of prevention for health and wellbeing?
    • What is the burden of chronic disease?
    • What are the economic benefits of prevention?
  • Our people
  • Our work
    • Research projects
    • Knowledge syntheses
    • Systems thinking
    • Dynamic simulation modelling
    • Collaboration for Enhanced Research Impact (CERI)
  • Our impact
    • Research impact
  • Resource hub
  • Events
  • News
  • Engage with us
    • The Chronicle newsletter
    • Emerging Leaders Network
    • Communities of practice
    • Work or study with us
    • Contact us
Search
What are you looking for?

You can search across all our content by topic, methodology and content type.

    Home > Resource hub > How Australian governments can achieve best practice in obesity policy

How Australian governments can achieve best practice in obesity policy

Dr Gary Sacks provides insights into engagement with government and the collaborative research process.
Dr Gary Sacks provides insights into engagement with government and the collaborative research process.

Associated content

  • Focus on the food system not the individual, experts urge

    News Category: Prevention Centre News
    Date 08 Aug 2017
    A wide variety of foods
Details

DATE 26 Jul 2017

TYPE Videos

Prevention experts

  • Professor Gary Sacks

    Deakin University
    Headshot of Gary Sacks

Topics

  • Overweight and obesity ,

Prevention methodologies

  • Regulation and governance ,

Related resources

  • Roadmap to tackle obesity prevention

    Resource category: Findings Brief Findings Brief
    Date 16 Feb 2017
SHARE
TweetLinkedInFacebookEmail

More resources

  • What makes a neighbourhood healthy, active and happy to live in?

    Resource category: Videos Videos
    Date 23 Jan 2023
  • What do we know about the laws that shape our built environments for walking and cycling in Australia?

    Resource category: Visuals Visuals
    Date 20 Jan 2023
  • Policy Development Handbook

    Resource category: Reports Reports
    Date 22 Dec 2022

Acknowledgement of Country

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.

Newsletter sign-up

Newsletter

Follow the Prevention Centre

Follow us

  • TwitterTwitter
  • LinkedinLinkedin
  • YoutubeYoutube
  • PodcastPodcast

Funding Partners

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre is funded by the NHMRC, Australian Government Department of Health, ACT Health, Cancer Council Australia, NSW Ministry of Health, Wellbeing SA, Tasmanian Department of Health, and VicHealth. The Australian Government also contributed through the Medical Research Future Fund. Queensland Health became a financial contributor in 2022. The Prevention Centre is administered by the Sax Institute.

©2023 The Sax Institute.

Footer Navigation

  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Copyright
  • Terms of Use
  • Sitemap

BROWSER NOT SUPPORTED

It seems you’re using a browser that we no longer support, so this site might not function as expected.

Please use Chrome, Safari, Firefox or Edge to visit this website.

Share this ArticleLike this article? Email it to a friend!

Email sent!