Health, Risk, and Adversity
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Edited by:
Catherine Panter-Brick
and Agustín Fuentes
About this book
Research on health involves evaluating the disparities that are systematically associated with the experience of risk, including genetic and physiological variation, environmental exposure to poor nutrition and disease, and social marginalization. This volume provides a unique perspective - a comparative approach to the analysis of health disparities and human adaptability - and specifically focuses on the pathways that lead to unequal health outcomes. From an explicitly anthropological perspective situated in the practice and theory of biosocial studies, this book combines theoretical rigor with more applied and practice-oriented approaches and critically examines infectious and chronic diseases, reproduction, and nutrition.
Author / Editor information
Catherine Panter-Brick is Professor of Anthropology at Yale University. Her research focuses on critical risks to health across key stages of human development. She has edited severa books to bridge research findings into teaching practice, such as Biosocial Perspectives on Children (1998), Hormones, Health, and Behavior (1999), Abandoned Children (2000), and Hunter-Gatherers (2001). She is Senior Editor (Medical Anthropology Section) for Social Science & Medicine.
--- Contributor: Agustín FuentesAgustín Fuentes is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, US. His research interests focus on primate and human behavior, pathogen transmission, and patterns in human and primate evolution. He has co-edited three books, The Non-Human Primates (1999), Primates Face to Face (2002), Primates in Perspective (2006) and recently completed a textbook in biological anthropology, Core Concepts in Biological Anthropology (2006). His most recent book is Evolution of Human Behavior (2008).
Reviews
"[This volume] is very well organized, overall, with a layout ideal for students and academics who are looking to collaborate with their colleagues in anthropology and public health. The chapter structures offer well thought out summaries; a helpful glossary is found in the back. Those curious about human action and inaction as sources of ill health will find adversity and risk’s impact on health clearly and vibrantly displayed through Panter-Brick and Fuentes’ bio-cultural investigation of unequal health outcomes." · Journal of the Bio-Social Society
"These are vibrant and important treatments of socio-cultural concepts in health that fit well into medical anthropology, but also go beyond that. Their contribution lies in reminding and refining how human health and biology are produced, perceived, and communicated in a deep social context that includes history, politics, economics, and current global culture, especially modern media.… The editors have brilliantly organized the volume." · Stephen T. McGarvey, Professor of Community Health and Anthropology, Brown University
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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List of Figures
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List of Tables
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List of Boxes
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Foreword. Framing Health, Risk, and Adversity
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Introduction. Health, Risk, and Adversity: A Contextual View from Anthropology
1 - PART I • HEALTH RISKS AND DISEASE IN TRANSITION
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Understanding Health: Past and Present
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1. Health Consequences of Social and Ecological Adversity Among Indigenous Siberian Populations: Biocultural and Evolutionary Interactions
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2. A Multidisciplinary Approach to Understanding the Risk and Context of Emerging Primate-Borne Zoonoses
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3. Viral Panic, Vulnerability, and the Next Pandemic
78 - PART II • GENERATIONAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL CHANGE
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Thinking about Health through Time and Across Generations
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4. Adaptation, Health, and the Temporal Domain of Human Reproductive Physiology
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5. Changes in Risk Factors for Breast Cancer in Migrant Women: An Intergenerational Comparison Among Bangladeshis in the United Kingdom
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6. Family Structure and Child Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa: Assessing “Hidden Risk”
150 - PART III • GENE EVOLUTION, ENVIRONMENT, AND HEALTH
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Explaining Health Inequalities
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7. The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease
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8. Beyond the Gradient: An Integrative Anthropological Perspective on Social Stratification, Stress, and Health
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9. The Slavery Hypothesis: An Evaluation of a Genetic-Deterministic Explanation for Hypertension Prevalence Rate Inequalities
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Conclusion. Adversity, Risk, and Health: A View from Public Health
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Contributors
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Glossary
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Index
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