Buch, Englisch, 366 Seiten, Format (B × H): 164 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 714 g
Past, Present, and Future Directions of Biosocial Collaboration
Buch, Englisch, 366 Seiten, Format (B × H): 164 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 714 g
ISBN: 978-1-009-20172-8
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction: Michael Penkler, Tessa Moll, Jaya Keaney and Michelle Pentecost; Part I. Mapping the Field's Past: 1. Porous bodies, impressible mothers: a global and longue durée perspective Maurizio Meloni and Natasha Rooney; 2. Transformations of the maternal-fetal relationship in the twentieth century: from maternal impressions to epigenetic states Tatjana Buklijas; 3. The first 5000 days: making DOHaD, 1989–2003 Mark Hanson and Tatjana Buklijas; Part II. The Social Life of DOHaD: 4. A biosocial return to race? Racial differences in DOHaD and environmental epigenetics Maurizio Meloni, Christopher Kuzawa, Ayuba Issaka and Tessa Moll; 5. The promise and treachery of nutrition in DOHaD: science, biopolitics, and gender Vivienne Moore and Megan Warin; 6. Gender, racism and DOHaD Natali Valdez and Martine Lappé; 7. DOHaD in economics: orthodox and egalitarian approaches Jennifer Cohen; 8. The 'moral paradox' of DOHaD Luca Chiapperino, Cindy Gerber, Francesco Panese and Umberto Simeoni; 9. Intergenerational justice, law and DOHaD Isabel Karpin; Part III. Key Concepts for Biosocial Research: 10. Lifecourse Mark Tomlinson, Amelia van der Merwe, Marguerite Marlow and Sarah Skeen; 11. Syndemics Edna Bosire, Michelle Pentecost and Emily Mendenhall; 12. Embodiment Ziyanda Majombozi and Mutsawashe Mutendi; 13. Causal crypticity Sarah S. Richardson; 14. Intergenerational trauma Jaya Keaney, Henrietta Byrne, Megan Warin and Emma Kowal; 15. Bioethnography Elizabeth F. S. Roberts, Jaclyn M. Goodrich, Erica C. Jansen, Belinda L. Needham, Brisa N. Sánchez and Martha M. Téllez Rojo; Part IV. Translations in Policy and Practice: 16. Translating evidence to policy: the challenge for DOHaD advocacy Felicia Low, Peter Gluckman and Mark Hanson; 17. Framing DOHaD for policy and society Chandni Maria Jacob, Michael Penkler, Ruth Muller and Mark Hanson; 18. The impact of community based participatory DOHaD research Siobhan Tu'akoi, Mark H. Vickers, Celeste Barrett-Watson, Kura Samuel-Ioane, Teaukura Puna, Joseph Drollet and Jacqui L. Bay; 19. The first 1000 Days and clinical practice in infant mental health Anusha Lachman, Astrid Berg, Fiona C. Ross and Simone M. Peters; Part V. The Biosocial in Practice: 20. Understanding child development: a biosocial anthropological approach to early life Emily H. Emmott and Sahra Gibbon; 21. Building biosocial collaboration in the HeLTI-South Africa trial Michelle Pentecost, Catherine E Draper, Khuthala Mabetha, Larske M Soepnel and Shane A Norris; 22. Doing environments in DOHaD and epigenetics Sophia Rossmann and Georgia Samaras; 23. Narrative choreographies: DOHaD, social justice and health equity Martha Kenney and Ruth Müller; 24. Interdependence: reworking ontogeny through fishbones and dirty chickens Shivani Kaul and Emily Yates-Doerr; Part VI. Future Directions: 25. Modelling in DOHaD: challenges and opportunities in the era of big data Julie Sigurdardottir and Salma Ayis; 26. The promise of reversibility in neuroepigenetics research on traumatic memories Stephanie Lloyd, Pierre-Eric Lutz and Chani Bonventre; 27. Disability in DOHaD and epigenetics: towards inclusive practice Katie Saulnier, Lara Azevedo, Neera Bhatia, Lillian Dipnall, Evie Kendal, Garth Stephenson and Jeffrey M Craig; 28. Creating good data our way: an Indigenous lens for epidemiology and intergenerational health Sarah Bourke and Raymond Lovett; 29. DOHaD in the Anthropocene: taking responsibility for anthropogenic biologies Jörg Niewöhner.