Models of Obesity: From Ecology to Complexity in Science and Policy: 78 (Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Series Number 78)
Cambridge University Press, 10/12/2017
EAN 9781107117518, ISBN10: 1107117518
Hardcover, 248 pages, 25.1 x 18 x 1.3 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
Taking a comparative approach, this book investigates the ways in which obesity and its susceptibilities are framed in science and policy and how they might work better. Providing a clear, authoritative voice on the debate, the author builds on early work to engage further in ecological and complexity thinking in obesity. Many of the models that have emerged since obesity became a population-level issue are examined, including the energy balance model, and models used to examine human body fatness from a range of perspectives including evolutionary, anthropological, environmental, and political viewpoints. The book is ideal for those working on, or interested in, obesity science, health policy, health economics, evolutionary medicine, medical sociology, nutrition and public health who want to understand the shifts that have taken place in obesity science, policy, and intervention in the past forty years.
Acknowledgements and influences
1. Introduction
2. Rationalities and models of obesity
3. Energy balance, genetics and obesogenic environments
4. Governance through measurement
5. Inequalities
6. Food and eating
7. Global transformations of diet
8. Obesity science and policy
9. Complexity
10. Systems and rationalities
Bibliography
Index.