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Globalization and Children’s Diets: The Case of Yucatan, Mexico

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Culture, Environment and Health in the Yucatan Peninsula

Abstract

Globalization is an economic force to bring about a closer integration of national economies. Globalization also has effects on human biology. Food globalization brings about nutritional transitions, the most common being a shift from a locally grown diet with minimally refined foods, to the modern diet of highly processed foods, high in saturated fat, animal products and sugar, and low in fiber. Food globalization also changes the social, economic, and political ecology and increases poverty for some. This chapter examines the influences of food globalization using the Maya children of Yucatan as a case study. Yucatecan Maya children often live in poverty and suffer the dual-burden of stunting (low height-for-age) and overweight/obesity. This may be due to eating processed foods with insufficient essential nutrients for normal metabolism and growth, to an energy imbalance related to sedentary behavior, to social and emotional stress of poverty that inhibit height growth, or some combination of these. The case of the Yucatan is not isolated, and we must come to terms with food globalization if we are to translate research into better child health and well-being.

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Acknowledgments

The research reported here is part of The Maya Project http://mayaproject.org.uk. Created in 2012, The Maya Project is a combination of biocultural research, fine arts, and public engagement. The goal is to accurately represent the living Maya people. The Maya Project achieves this goal through the photography, paintings, music, crafts, and writing of Maya artists, as well as non-Maya artists and researchers. The authors thank the Wenner-Gren Foundation (#IRCG-93) and Santander Universities at Loughborough University for funding this research. Janice Tut-Be, Deira Jiménez.Balam, Hannah Wilson, and Adriana Vázquez-Vázquez provided valuable assistance in fieldwork and ethnographic understanding. The cooperation of the Maya mothers and their children, as well as local primary schools in the Maya neighborhoods, is very much appreciated.

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Correspondence to Barry Bogin .

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Bogin, B., Azcorra, H., Ávila-Escalante, M.L., Castillo-Burguete, M.T., Varela-Silva, M.I., Dickinson, F. (2020). Globalization and Children’s Diets: The Case of Yucatan, Mexico. In: Azcorra, H., Dickinson, F. (eds) Culture, Environment and Health in the Yucatan Peninsula. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27001-8_3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27001-8_3

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  • Publisher Name: Springer, Cham

  • Print ISBN: 978-3-030-27000-1

  • Online ISBN: 978-3-030-27001-8

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