The Metabolic Ghetto: An Evolutionary Perspective on Nutrition, Power Relations and Chronic Disease

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Chronic diseases have rapidly become the leading global cause of morbidity and mortality, yet there is poor understanding of this transition, or why particular social and ethnic groups are especially susceptible. In this book, Wells adopts a multidisciplinary approach to human nutrition, emphasizing how power relations shape the physiological pathways to obesity, diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Part I reviews the physiological basis of chronic diseases, presenting a ‘capacity–load’ model that integrates the nutritional contributions of developmental experience and adult lifestyle. Part II presents an evolutionary perspective on the sensitivity of human metabolism to ecological stresses, highlighting how social hierarchy impacts metabolism on an intergenerational timescale. Part III reviews how nutrition has changed over time, as societies evolved and coalesced towards a single global economic system. Part IV integrates these physiological, evolutionary and politico-economic perspectives in a unifying framework, to deepen our understanding of the societal basis of metabolic ill-health.

Author(s): Jonathan C. K. Wells
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2016

Language: English
Pages: 625
Tags: Life Sciences, Evolutionary Biology, Biological Anthropology, Primatology

Preface page ix
1 Introduction 1
Part I The Physiology of Chronic Disease 21
2 Models of Chronic Disease 23
3 Links Between Nutrition and Ill-Health 43
4 The Developmental Origins of Disease 64
5 Life-Course Models of Chronic Disease Aetiology 83
6 Social, Ethnic and Geographical Variability 106
Part II An Evolutionary Perspective on Human Metabolism 127
7 Life History Theory 129
8 Ancestral Environments 149
9 The Evolution of Human Adaptability 167
10 Sensitivity in Early Life 189
11 The Evolutionary Biology of Inequality 213
12 The Metabolic Ghetto 233
Part III A Historical Perspective on Human Nutrition 253
13 The Emergence of Agriculture 255
14 Trade, Capitalism and Imperialism 275
15 Hierarchy, Growth and Metabolism 295
16 The Emergence of Consumerism 317
17 The Political Economy of Nutrition 339
18 The Dual Burden of Malnutrition 359
Part IV Power, Nutrition and Society 381
19 A Series of Games 383
20 A Question of Agency 406
21 Epilogue 431
Notes 437
References 482
Index 602