Merlin's Cave
 Destination:  Accueil» English Books » Food Science » Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health  
Merlin Site Links
  • Store Home
  • Site Home
  • Categories
    Livres
    DVD
    L'electronique
    English Books
    Jeux Video
    Musique
    Logiciels
    Jeux et Jouets
    Video
    Related Categories
    • Food Science
    Agricultural Sciences
    Science
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • Agricultural
    Economics
    Business & Investing
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • General AAS
    Popular Economics
    Business & Investing
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • Health Policy
    Administration & Policy
    Medicine
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • Health Policy
    Administration & Medicine Economics
    Medical
    Professional & Technical
    Subjects
    • Nutrition
    Public Health
    Administration & Medicine Economics
    Medical
    Professional & Technical
    • General
    Food Sciences
    Agricultural Sciences
    Professional Science
    Professional & Technical
    • Professional
    Professional Cooking
    Cooking, Food & Wine
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • General
    Sociology
    Social Sciences
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    • General AAS
    Sociology
    Social Sciences
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    • Public Policy
    Government
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais

    Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health

    Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health

    agrandir agrandir 
    Auteur: Marion Nestle
    Créateur: Marion Nestle
    Éditeur: University of California Press

    Prix de liste: EUR 13,28
    Acheter Neuf: EUR 8,74
    Vous épargnez: EUR 4,54 (34%)

    Quantité 1 Disponible


    Neuf (21) D'occasion (4) de EUR 8,74

    Classement parmi les ventes: 16311

    Média: Broche
    Édition: Revised
    Pages: 510
    Poids (kg): 1.5
    Dimension (cm): 8.8 x 5.9 x 1.3

    ISBN: 0520254031
    Code Décimal Dewey: 338.4764130973
    EAN: 9780520254039
    ASIN: 0520254031

    Date de publication: Octobre 15, 2007
    Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres
    Expédition: Livraison internationale disponible
    Condition: Livre neuf, expedie par avion de Grande Bretagne, livre en 5 a 8 jours ouvres.

    Découvrez des articles similaires:

      • What to Eat

    Revues éditoriales:

    Amazon.com
    In the U.S., we're bombarded with nutritional advice--the work, we assume, of reliable authorities with our best interests at heart. Far from it, says Marion Nestle, whose Food Politics absorbingly details how the food industry--through lobbying, advertising, and the co-opting of experts--influences our dietary choices to our detriment. Central to her argument is the American "paradox of plenty," the recognition that our food abundance (we've enough calories to meet every citizen's needs twice over) leads profit-fixated food producers to do everything possible to broaden their market portion, thus swaying us to eat more when we should do the opposite. The result is compromised health: epidemic obesity to start, and increased vulnerability to heart and lung disease, cancer, and stroke--reversible if the constantly suppressed "eat less, move more" message that most nutritionists shout could be heard.

    Nestle, nutrition chair at New York University and editor of the 1988 Surgeon General Report, has served her time in the dietary trenches and is ideally suited to revealing how government nutritional advice is watered down when a message might threaten industry sales. (Her report on byzantine nutritional food-pyramid rewordings to avoid "eat less" recommendations is both predictable and astonishing.) She has other "war stories," too, that involve marketing to children in school (in the form of soft-drink "pouring rights" agreements, hallway advertising, and fast-food coupon giveaways), and diet-supplement dramas in which manufacturers and the government enter regulation frays, with the industry championing "free choice" even as that position counters consumer protection. Is there hope? "If we want to encourage people to eat better diets," says Nestle, "we need to target societal means to counter food industry lobbying and marketing practices as well as the education of individuals." It's a telling conclusion in an engrossing and masterfully panoramic expose. --Arthur Boehm

    Quantité 1 Disponible


    Merlin's Cave