Food Systems and Health

Sara Shostak
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Hardback
9781786350923
13 July 2017
$165.99
eBook (PDF)
9781786350916
13 July 2017
$165.99
eBook (ePub)
9781787148901
13 July 2017
$165.99

Note on our eBooks and Audiobooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) and listen to audiobooks on the free Emerald Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. Or read and listen on Emerald's online reader (ePUB eBooks and audiobooks only). To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
  • About
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.

Introduction: Towards a Sociology of Food Systems and Population Health; Sara Shostak  Part 1 - Food Systems and Health Outcomes  Chapter 1 - Food System Channels, Health and Illness; Jeffery Sobal  Chapter 2 - Rich Foods: The Cross-National Effects of Healthy Eating on Health Outcomes; Jane S. van Heuvelen and Tom van Heuvelen  Chapter 3 - Food Insecurity and Mental Health: A Gendered Issue?; Gabriele Ciciurkaite and Robyn Lewis Brown  Part 2 - The Social Determinants of Consumption  Chapter 4 - Food Priorities: Sociodemographic Variation in Constrained Choices at the Grocery Store; Christy Freadreacea Brady  Chapter 5 - Educational Attainment and Dietary Lifestyles; Hannah Andrews, Terrence D. Hill and William C. Cockerham   Chapter 6 - Let them eat cake: Socioeconomic status and caregiver indulgence of children’s food and drink requests; Brea L. Perry and Jessica McCrory Calarco  Part 3 - Alternative Food Institutions and Ideologies  Chapter 7 - The Promises and Pitfalls of Alternative Food Institutions: Impacts on and Barriers to Engagement with Low-Income Persons in the United States and Canada; Amy Jonason  Chapter 8 - Extension of What and to Whom? A Qualitative Study of Self-Provisioning Service Delivery in a University Extension Program; Ashley Colby and Emily Huddart Kennedy  Chapter 9 - “Grounded in the Neighborhood, Grounded in Community”: Social Capital and Health in Community Gardens; Sara Shostak and Norris Guscott  Chapter 10 - Reclaiming Policy Imagination: Buen Vivir, policy culture, and the policy divide between health and agriculture in Puerto Rico; Gabriel Blouin Genest

    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 ©2017
    Sara Shostak is Associate Professor of Sociology and Chair of the Health: Science, Society, and Policy (HSSP) Program at Brandeis University. Her research and teaching interests encompass medical sociology, science and technology studies, and environmental sociology. Across these domains, Shostak focuses on how to understand - and address - inequalities in health. Shostak's first book - Exposed Science: Genes, the Environment, and the Politics of Population Health (University of California Press, 2013) - won the Robert K. Merton Book Award from the American Sociology Association’s Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology and the Eliot Freidson Outstanding Publication Award from the Medical Sociology Section. Shostak’s current book project is a study of urban agriculture in New England cities; as part of this work, she has collaborated on community based research projects with The Urban Farming Institute of Boston, The Food Project, and Groundwork Somerville. 
    Brea L. Perry is an Associate Professor of Sociology and an affiliated faculty of the Indiana University Network Science Institute at Indiana University, Bloomington. Her research focuses on the intersections of social networks, medical sociology, biosociology, and social inequalities. Her current NIH-funded projects investigate social network indicators of prescription drug seeking behavior, the role of personal social networks in neurodegeneration and older adults’ cognitive decline, and the coevolution of recent Mexican immigrants’ social networks and oral health attitudes, behaviors, and outcomes.