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Routledge Handbook of Sustainable Diets [Minkštas viršelis]

Edited by (Dalhousie University, Canada), Edited by
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 718 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1420 g, 27 Tables, black and white; 29 Line drawings, black and white; 19 Halftones, black and white; 48 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Mar-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032004975
  • ISBN-13: 9781032004976
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 718 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1420 g, 27 Tables, black and white; 29 Line drawings, black and white; 19 Halftones, black and white; 48 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Mar-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032004975
  • ISBN-13: 9781032004976
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

This handbook presents a must-read, comprehensive and state of the art overview of sustainable diets, an issue critical to the environment and the health and well-being of society.



This handbook presents a must-read, comprehensive and state of the art overview of sustainable diets, an issue critical to the environment and the health and well-being of society.

Sustainable diets seek to minimise and mitigate the significant negative impact food production has on the environment. Simultaneously they aim to address worrying health trends in food consumption through the promotion of healthy diets that reduce premature disability, disease and death. Within the Routledge Handbook of Sustainable Diets, creative, compassionate, critical, and collaborative solutions are called for across nations, across disciplines and sectors. In order to address these wide-ranging issues the volume is split into sections dealing with environmental strategies, health and well-being, education and public engagement, social policies and food environments, transformations and food movements, economics and trade, design and measurement mechanisms and food sovereignty. Comprising of contributions from up and coming and established academics, the handbook provides a global, multi-disciplinary assessment of sustainable diets, drawing on case studies from regions across the world. The handbook concludes with a call to action, which provides readers with a comprehensive map of strategies that could dramatically increase sustainability and help to reverse global warming, diet related non-communicable diseases, and oppression and racism.

This decisive collection is essential reading for students, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers concerned with promoting sustainable diets and thus establishing a sustainable food system to ensure access to healthy and nutritious food for all.

Chapter 40 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

Recenzijos

"The broad pathway to feeding everyone a diet that is healthy and sustainable is clear, but to make this happen will take enormous local and regional creativity and perseverance. This can be greatly facilitated by learning from the experiences of each other, and this handbook is a giant step in this direction."

Walter Willett, Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, USA

"Our recognition that we are now in the Anthropocene era has highlighted that many activities of humans are not sustainable; therefore, we should recognize and learn from our past mistakes and successes. This involves re-evaluating our past behaviour, considering new pathways to sustainability, educating ourselves, and finding opportunities from crises. This book, co-edited by Kathleen Kevany and Paolo Prosperi, helps each of us to do that re-evaluation, through meeting the four interwoven critical challenges of our time: global demand for food; weather chaos due to climate change; decreasing quality and quantity of freshwater; and human livelihood disruption. A positive future is possible, and the authors of this comprehensive and wide-ranging text help point the way."

CD Caldwell, Prof. Emeritus, Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University, Canada

"This comprehensive, all encompassing handbook on sustainable diets, curated by Kathleen Kevany and Paolo Prosperi, provides us with the theory, the measuring, the meaning and the cultivating of sustainable diets around the world. If you were unclear on what exactly are sustainable diets in all their facets, this book will provide the nuanced answers from different experienced perspectives."

Professor Jessica Fanzo, Johns Hopkins University, USA

"Handbook of Sustainable Diets thoughtfully and unapologetically tackles the difficult conversations that need to be had now about the impacts of sustainable eating and sustainable food systems. It provides much needed practical methods from every facet of life and beautifully lays them out for us to follow. This is a must read for all researchers, policy makers, activists and eaters."

Amy Symington, Cookbook author, nutrition professor, researcher and plant-based chef with George Brown College, Canada

"Our food system is central to our interlinked health, climate, and ecological crises which pose an imminent and existential threat to the survival of our species and many others. At the heart of this sadly lies a crisis of ethics. We have taken little care of our planet, each other, and the non-human animals with whom we share it. Dr. Kathleen Kevany and Dr. Paolo Prosperi are to be deeply commended on this monumental international effort to provide an all-encompassing, inter-disciplinary and systems level handbook on the urgent need and considerations for a more sustainable and healthful plant-based food system, that is culturally appropriate, equitable and just. I hope this incredible book, vast in its scope and knowledge, will fuel the actions required by of all of us, so we can look forward to a better future."

Zahra Kassam MBBS MSc FRCR(UK) FRCP(C) DiplABLM, Oncologist, University of Toronto, Canada. Co-Founder and Co-Director of Plant-Based Canada

"As we move from and through a pandemic crisis, to supply-chain crisis and even war disruptions, a constant is the need for people to sustain themselves via the food they consume. This is a timely publication that warrants a focused read."

Joe Sbrocchi, General Manager, Ontario Greenhouse Vegetable Growers, Canada

"In these critical times of simultaneous environmental, equity, and health crises, we need transdisciplinary and transprofessional approaches to wicked problem solving. This handbook offers insightful strategies, helps to map the way, and as such, holds the potential to become a definitive guide for actors collaborating across all sectors to facilitate the effective and urgent adoption of sustainable diets. After all, eating, as Wendell Berry puts it, is an agricultural act."

Duncan Hilchey, Publisher, and Editor in Chief: of The Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development (JAFSCD), Lyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food Systems

FRAMING and VISION
1. Inspiring sustainable diets
2. Dignity, justice,
and the right to food
3. Reframing the sustainable diets narrative: Shifting
diets by confronting systemic racism in the U.S. food systems4. Where
sustainable diets fit in global governance ENVIRONMENTAL STRATEGIES
5.
Climate change, food security, and sustainable diets
6. The significance of
agrobiodiversity for sustainable diets
7. Practising agroecology for
sustainable diets and healthy communities 8.Conserving insect biodiversity in
agroecosystems is essential for sustainable diets
9. Bread from bugs and the
significance of employing insect foods in the human diet
10. Realising the
potential for aquatic foods to contribute to environmentally sustainable and
healthy diets
11. Life, death, and dinner among the molluscs: Human appetites
and sustainable aquaculture
12. Grass-fed lies: The mythology of sustainable
meat
13. Re-meatification: The potential of plant-based alternatives to
animal foods in transitions towards more sustainable and humane diets HEALTH
and WELL-BEING
14. Health, well-being, and burden of disease 15.Global burden
of zoonotic disease, pandemics, COVID-19 and sustainable diets
16. Eating for
health and the environment: Food systems analysis and the Ecological
Determinants of Health
17. Breastfeeding: A foundational strategy to
strengthen sustainability in infant nutrition and development
18. Towards
more comprehensive analyses of the Nutrition Transition among adolescents in
the rural South: An empirical contribution EDUCATION and PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
19. Beyond what not to eat: supporting communities to know sustainable diets
20. Food literacy, pedagogies, and dietary guidelines: Converging approaches
for health and sustainability
21. Food systems literacy and critique
22.
Collective action in undergraduate food systems education to enhance
sustainable diets
23. Prefigurative spaces of critical food literacy: The
case for campus food growing spaces
24. Food gardens for sustainable diets in
the Anthropocene
25. Broadening our definition of sustainable food: Shifting
perception, policy, and practice to include nonhuman animals SOCIAL POLICIES
and FOOD ENVIRONMENTS
26. (Re)Building sustainable City Region Food Systems
after COVID-19: The role of local governments and food initiatives
27.
Reorienting food environments to support sustainable diets
28. A framework
for integrating sustainability in international food-based dietary guidelines
29. Odisha Millet Mission: A transformative food system for mainstreaming
sustainable diets30. Reframing Sustainable Diets as Sustainable Food
Consumption TRANSFORMATIONS and FOOD MOVEMENTS
31. The inner dimensions of
sustainable diets
32. Inspiring a plant-based transformation within the
foodservice industry
33. Food movements to foster adoption of more
planet-friendly foods and sustainable diets
34. How do alternative food
networks contribute to changing food behaviours towards more sustainable
diets?
35. Sectors of society supporting sustainable diets: An examination of
Slow Food as a pathway towards sustainable diets ECONOMICS and TRADE
36.
Living wage and living income for sustainable diets
36. Financialisation and
sustainable diets
38. Hazards ahead? Potential pitfalls in the surge of
plant-based alternatives to animal foods
39. Tomorrows agri-food system: The
connections between trade, food security, and nutrition for a sustainable
diet
40. Circular bioeconomy of agri-food value chains: innovative,
sustainable, and circular business models contributions to sustainable diets
and food systems
41. Rethinking and practising the 3Rs (reduce, reuse,
recycle) for preventing food loss and waste to increase food security DESIGN
and MEASUREMENT MECHANISMS
42. Enabling and measuring adoption of sustainable
diets
43. Measuring the sustainability of food systems: The rationale for
Footprint Indicators
44. The role of design in the transition to sustainable
diets
45. Technology, digitalisation, and AI for sustainability: An
assessment of digitalisation for food system transitions FOOD SOVEREIGNTY and
CASE STUDIES
46. Sustainability dimensions of Indigenous Peoples food
systems in a changing world
47. Food security, sufficiency, and affordability
in Sub-Saharan Africa: Development of local sustainable food systems
48.
Millets and krai: Two food categories emblematic of the ability and
knowledge of Tamil women to ensure a healthy and sustainable diet
49.
Challenges and opportunities for sustainable diets in India: A systems
strengthening perspective
50. Cultivating sustainable diets in China:
Challenges and opportunities
51. Bio-cultural diversity in South America:
Overcoming agro-extractivism linked to unhealthy diets
52. Climate
transformations: Evolving food security, migration, and alternative
livelihood strategies in Panama
53. A reflection on globalisation influencing
resilience of the contemporary Kosraean food systems CALL TO ACTION
54.
Monitoring food environments and systems for sustainable diets in Africa:
Lessons from Ghana, Kenya, Senegal, and South Africa
55. Call to action for
Sustainable Diets
Kathleen Kevany is an associate professor and director of Rural Research Collaborative with Dalhousie University, USA. She has decades of experience in community building along with research expertise in increasing well-being, for individuals and communities as well strategies to foster greater food security, sovereignty and sustainability through sustainable diets. She is the editor of Plant-Based Diets for Succulence and Sustainability (Routledge, 2019).

Paolo Prosperi is a senior lecturer and researcher of agricultural and food economics and scientific co-ordinator of the MSc Food Value Chains at the Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Montpellier, France. He researches agricultural and food economics, with a particular focus on sustainable food systems, sustainable agri-food value chains, sustainability and resilience assessment frameworks, and sustainable diets.