Minutes

Paper 15.5 External Expertise Mapping

Last updated: 19 January 2026

Summary

This paper outlines work undertaken to identify organisations with expertise in food policy research and analytical methods. The aim is to improve awareness of relevant research programmes and methodological approaches that may support or align with FSA priorities.

Members are asked to consider:

  1. Are there any organisations or research groups working in the areas identified as gaps (shown in table 1) that we have not identified?
  2. An alphabetical list of organisations is shown in annex A (by topic) and annex B (by method). Are there any additional organisations with relevant expertise that we have not identified?

Background

This paper summarises recent work to identify external organisations with expertise relevant to the FSA’s Analytics Unit (AU) and policy areas. The purpose of this work is to strengthen our awareness of current research programmes and methodological approaches that may support or align with FSA priorities, helping ensure that the AU’s work remains connected to developments across the wider evidence landscape.

This exercise has involved compiling structured lists of organisations and research groups to develop an up-to-date view of external expertise in:

  • Food policy research, including areas such as food crime, novel foods, and wider consumer interests.
  • Analytical methods used in social science, economics, statistics, and operational research

Approach

To identify relevant external expertise in food policy research and analytical methodologies, we began by consolidating existing internal sources of stakeholder information including: FSA Stakeholder Register and Register of Specialists, Science and evidence research directorate (SERD) intranet and newsletters (which includes updates on recent engagements and featured researchers), and the SERD stakeholder map (compiled earlier this year using SAC stakeholder lists, publication authors, and known collaborators).

This helped us establish a foundation of known organisations and research groups and identify areas where external expertise might currently be missing or underrepresented.

We then conducted targeted online searches to identify additional expertise, this included:

  • Using university department pages, research group websites, and publication databases to identify relevant expertise in food policy topics and research methods. We focused on the Russell Group universities as a starting point, given their research intensity.
  • Using curated lists such as the Food Research Collaboration’s directory of Food Research Institutes in the UK to identify specialist centres and networks.

The organisations identified through this process are listed alphabetically in the annexes:

  • Annex A: Organisations and research groups with food policy expertise
  • Annex B: Organisations and research groups with methodological expertise

Analysis of topic and method coverage

To support future use of the data, we developed a tagging system to classify expertise by topic and method:

  • Topic keywords were based on the latest categorisation of AU projects, as reflected in our updated internal folder structure. These were adapted to reflect emerging areas of interest, for example, Novel Foods was added as a standalone topic due to significant AU activity in CBD, precision breeding, and alternative proteins.
  • Topic keywords chosen were: Food Crime; Business Compliance (RCD, NLR); Operational Delivery (Regulated Products Delivery, OVs, Field Ops, Ops Assurance); Risk Analysis (Regulated Products Reform, Chemical, Radiological); Novel Foods (CBD, PB, CCP, Alt proteins, emerging technologies); Foodborne Diseases; AMR; Food Hypersensitivities; Trade; Consumer Monitoring (behaviour & perception); Communications (risk comms); Nutrition; Strategy (Strategic Insight, wider interests e.g. sustainability, schools, vulnerable, food insecurity); Not specified.
  • Method keywords were identified by analysing FSA Social Science publications using CoPilot and grouped into overarching categories. Other AU teams (e.g. Operational Research, Economics, Statistics) have been invited to add to this list to ensure cross-disciplinary coverage.
  • Method keywords chosen were: Evidence reviews; Surveys; Statistical analysis; Interviews, focus groups; Participatory, e.g. CitSci, deliberative; Ethnographic, e.g. observation; Creative e.g. social media; Innovative, e.g. AI, eye tracking; Behaviour change e.g. trials, experiments; Evaluations, e.g. process, outcome; Not specified.

Expertise was tagged by matching these keywords to descriptors found in “About Us” sections, research summaries, and publication abstracts.

These topic and method tags were then used to assess the breadth of coverage across the organisations identified. This analysis helped us highlight seven areas where expertise appears limited or fragmented.

Table 1 summarises the food policy topics and research methods that are currently underrepresented in the mapping.

Next Steps

Our overall aim is to create a searchable database to support colleagues in the Analytics Unit (and wider FSA) to identify suitable external research expertise and maintain awareness of external research programmes and publications. We will seek input from the ACSS assurance group when we have a first draft of this database and will update periodically.

Table 1: Areas of expertise with limited coverage

Area Organisations identified with expertise Link
Innovative methods (e.g. AI, eye-tracking) National Centre for Social Research Methodology and Innovation Hub
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) Royal Agricultural University Food policy, quality and security
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) University of Birmingham Birmingham Food Network
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) University of Leeds Global Food and Environment Institute
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) University of Leeds Social Research Methods Centre
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) University of Manchester Management Sciences
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) University of Sheffield Sheffield Methods Institute
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) Nesta Nesta
Creative methods (e.g. social media, arts-based methods) WRAP WRAP
Food crime Queen's University Belfast Institute for Global Food Security
Food crime University of Portsmouth Food Cultures in Transition (FOODCITI) Research Cluster
Food crime University of York Food, Water & Waste - York Environmental Sustainability Institute
Food crime University of York AgriFood at York - Research
Food crime POST Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) 
Food hypersensitivities Imperial College London Centre for Translational Nutrition and Food Research
Food hypersensitivities University of Bath Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Change
Food hypersensitivities University of Manchester InformAll: Communicating about Food Allergies 
Food hypersensitivities University of Surrey Food, Consumer Behaviour and Health Research Centre
Food hypersensitivities House of Commons Library The House of Commons Library
Foodborne diseases / Antimicrobial resistance University College Dublin / Queen's University Belfast / University of Sheffield Co-Centre for Sustainable Food Systems
Foodborne diseases / Antimicrobial resistance University of Exeter Exeter Food
Foodborne diseases / Antimicrobial resistance University of Greenwich Centre for Food Systems Research - Natural Resources Institute
Foodborne diseases / Antimicrobial resistance University of Leeds School of Geography
Foodborne diseases / Antimicrobial resistance University of Sussex Institute of Development Studies
Business Compliance University of Manchester Management Sciences
Business Compliance UWE Bristol School of Applied Social Sciences
Operational Delivery None identified yet None identified yet

Discussion

Members are asked to consider:

  1. Are there any organisations or research groups working in the areas identified as gaps (shown in table 1) that we have not identified?
  2. An alphabetical list of organisations is shown in annex A (by topic) and annex B (by method). Are there any additional organisations with relevant expertise that we have not identified?

Annex A: Organisations and research groups with food policy expertise

Organisation/Collaboration Department / Research Group
Cardiff University Research Centre for Sustainable Urban and Regional Food (SURF) 
City St George's, University of London Centre for Food Policy
City St George's, University of London Food Research Collaboration 
Fuse 6-University collaboration
Healthy People, Healthy Food 7-University collaboration
Imperial College London Centre for Translational Nutrition and Food Research
Lancaster University Food Security for Equitable Futures
London School of Economics (LSE) Consortium on Behavioural Science
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Food Policy Impact Lab
Newcastle University School of Natural and Environmental Sciences
Newcastle University Centre for Rural Economy
NIHR Policy Research Units at Universities NIHR Policy Research Units 2024-2028
Queen Mary University of London Centre for Public Health and Policy - Wolfson Institute of Population Health
Queen's University Belfast Institute for Global Food Security
Royal Agricultural University Food policy, quality and security
Salient 8-University collaboration plus BIT and Nesta
Scotland's Rural College (SRUC) Economics & policy | SRUC
Scottish Alliance for Food 10-University collaboration
SOAS University of London SOAS Food Studies Centre 
UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Transforming UK Food System (TUKFS)
UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Global Food Security
University College Dublin / Queen's University Belfast / University of Sheffield Co-Centre for Sustainable Food Systems
University College London (UCL) Food, Metabolism & Society
University College London (UCL) Centre for Behaviour Change
University of Aberdeen Food: Cultures, Economy, Sovereignty | The School of Social Science 
University of Bath Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Change
University of Bath Centre for Development Studies
University of Birmingham Birmingham Food Network
University of Bristol Nutrition and Behaviour Unit | School of Psychological Science
University of Cambridge Population Health Interventions - MRC Epidemiology Unit
University of Cambridge Behaviour Change By Design | Department of Public Health and Primary Care (PHPC)
University of Cambridge Cambridge Global Food Security
University of Edinburgh Food Researchers in Edinburgh (FRIED)
University of Edinburgh Global Agriculture and Food Systems | The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies
University of Exeter Exeter Food
University of Greenwich Centre for Food Systems Research - Natural Resources Institute
University of Hertfordshire Centre for Agriculture, Food and Environmental Management Research
University of Hertfordshire Centre for Research in Public Health and Community Care (CRIPACC)
University of Leeds Global Food and Environment Institute
University of Leeds School of Geography
University of Leeds / University College London / University of Liverpool / University of Oxford Consumer Data Research Centre
University of Lincoln Lincoln Institute for Agri-Food Technology | University of Lincoln
University of Liverpool Transforming the UK food system | Institute of Population Health
University of Manchester Management Sciences
University of Manchester InformAll: Communicating about Food Allergies 
University of Manchester Sustainable Consumption Institute | The University of Manchester
University of Nottingham Food Systems Institute
University of Oxford (with international collaborators) TableDebates
University of Oxford Food Systems Transformation | Environmental Change Institute
University of Oxford Future of Food | Oxford Martin School
University of Portsmouth Food Cultures in Transition (FOODCITI) Research Cluster
University of Reading Department of Agri-Food Economics and Marketing
University of Reading Institute for Food Nutrition & Health
University of Sheffield Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute | SPERI
University of Sheffield Institute for Sustainable Food
University of Sheffield / University of Leeds National Alternative Protein Innovation Centre (NAPIC)
University of Surrey Food, Consumer Behaviour and Health Research Centre
University of Sussex Institute of Development Studies
University of Sussex Institute of Development Studies
University of Warwick Our Research - Food GRP
University of York Food, Water & Waste - York Environmental Sustainability Institute
University of York Food sustainability and security - Research
University of York AgriFood at York - Research
UWE Bristol School of Applied Sciences
Centre for Science and Policy CSaP Affiliate Network
Chatham House Agriculture and food
Food Ethics Council Not specified
House of Commons Library The House of Commons Library
Nesta A healthy life | Nesta
Nuffield Council on Bioethics The environment & health – Nuffield Council on Bioethics
Nuffield Foundation Not specified
Nuffield Foundation Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) Not specified
The Food Foundation Not specified
The Institution of Environmental Sciences (IES) Not specified
Trussell Not specified
WRAP Not specified

Annex B: Organisations and research groups with methods expertise

Organisation Department / Research Group
8-University collaboration plus UKHSA, Scottish & Welsh govts: Behavioural Research UK Behavioural Research UK (BR-UK)
7-University collaboration, UKFS-CDT UK Food Systems Centre for Doctoral Training
London School of Economics (LSE) Department of Psychological & Behavioural Science
University of Birmingham Centre for National Training and Research Excellence in Understanding Behaviour (CENTRE-UB)
University of Essex Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER)
University of Leeds Social Research Methods Centre
University of Sheffield Sheffield Methods Institute
University of Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute (S3RI)
University of Southampton Methodological Innovation: Survey Methods and Official Statistics
University of Warwick Behavioural Science Group
National Centre for Social Research Our expertise | National Centre for Social Research
Universities Policy Engagement Network (UPEN) Policymaker support – UPEN