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Food Systems and Health

Advances in Medical Sociology

Edited by Sara Shostak
Series edited by Brea L. Perry
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, United Kingdom
Published: 13th Jul 2017
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm
ISBN-10: 1786350920
ISBN-13: 9781786350923
Barcode No: 9781786350923
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Synopsis
In recent years, the ways in which food is produced, distributed, and consumed have emerged as prominent health and social issues. With rising concern about rates of obesity, food systems have attracted the attention of state actors, leading to both innovative and controversial public health interventions, such as citywide soda bans, "veggie prescription" initiatives, and farm-to-school programs. At the same time, social movement activism has emerged focused on issues related to food and health, including movements for food justice, food safety, farm worker's rights, and community control of land for agricultural production. Meanwhile, many individuals and families struggle to obtain food that is affordable, accessible, and meaningfully connected to their cultures. Volume 18 of Advances in Medical Sociology brings cutting-edge sociological research to bear on these multiple dimensions of food systems and their impacts on individual and population health. This volume will highlight how food systems matter for health policy, health politics, and the lived experiences and life chances of individuals and communities.

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Newspapers & Magazines
Sociologists address critiques of the dominant food system, causes of poor nutrition and its public health consequences, food policy and program initiatives at multiple levels, and divergent cultural and political responses to policy interventions. Their topics include rich foods: the cross-national effects of healthy eating on health outcomes, food priorities: socio-demographic variation in constrained choices at the grocery store, educational attainment and dietary lifestyles, extensions of what and to whom: a qualitative study of self-provisioning service delivery in a university extension program, and grounded in the neighborhood and the community: social capital and health in community gardens. -- Annotation (c)2017 * (protoview.com) *