“…Likewise, global food systems have been at risk under the Covid-19 pandemic, which has caused economic shocks with stronger impacts on medium and small agri-food producers that, under the need of cash flow and financial liquidity, might recur to illegal loans provided by organised criminals. Additionally, this perspective moves on from the traditional frame of food offences as crimes against consumers towards a wider approach capable of highlighting the social harms caused by food crime practices, labelling victims of food crimes as food citizens rather than only consumers and, finally, considering interests such as the defence of food culture, food democracy and food sovereignty [2,4,5,7,14,15,98,99,[115][116][117][118].…”