This article re-examines energy and nutrition available to British working-class households in the late 1930s using individual household expenditure and consumption data. We use these data to address a number of questions. First, what was the extent of malnutrition in late 1930s Britain? Second, how did the incidence change over time? Third, what were the nutritional consequences of the school meals and school milk schemes? We conclude that, for working households, energy and nutritional availability improved significantly compared with current estimates of availability before the First World War. These improvements were not equally shared, however. In the late 1930s, homes with an unemployed head of household had diets that provided around...
Throughout the twentieth century, historians debated what happened to the living standards of ordina...
School meals were developed because of charitable, and subsequently official, concern about the effe...
School meals were developed because of charitable, and subsequently official, concern about the effe...
This article re‐examines energy and nutrition available to British working‐class households in the l...
This article re-examines energy and nutrition available to British working-class households in the l...
This article re‐examines energy and nutrition available to British working‐class households in the l...
This article re-examines energy and nutrition available to British working-class households in the l...
This article re-examines the food consumption of working class households in 1904 and compares the n...
This article re-examines the food consumption of working-class households in 1904 and compares the n...
Ideas concerning relationships between diet and health in the UK are traced from the 1904 Comittee ...
Levels of nutrition among British worker's households in the late nineteenth century have been much ...
The practice of controlling food supplies has existed since ancient times—driven by urbanization, th...
This article employs a household survey of low-income working-class households conducted in Tokyo in...
This thesis aims to gain a greater understanding of nutritional health in 19th-century England to fa...
Fattening children or fattening farmers? School milk in Britain, 1921-1941. The introduction of scho...
Throughout the twentieth century, historians debated what happened to the living standards of ordina...
School meals were developed because of charitable, and subsequently official, concern about the effe...
School meals were developed because of charitable, and subsequently official, concern about the effe...
This article re‐examines energy and nutrition available to British working‐class households in the l...
This article re-examines energy and nutrition available to British working-class households in the l...
This article re‐examines energy and nutrition available to British working‐class households in the l...
This article re-examines energy and nutrition available to British working-class households in the l...
This article re-examines the food consumption of working class households in 1904 and compares the n...
This article re-examines the food consumption of working-class households in 1904 and compares the n...
Ideas concerning relationships between diet and health in the UK are traced from the 1904 Comittee ...
Levels of nutrition among British worker's households in the late nineteenth century have been much ...
The practice of controlling food supplies has existed since ancient times—driven by urbanization, th...
This article employs a household survey of low-income working-class households conducted in Tokyo in...
This thesis aims to gain a greater understanding of nutritional health in 19th-century England to fa...
Fattening children or fattening farmers? School milk in Britain, 1921-1941. The introduction of scho...
Throughout the twentieth century, historians debated what happened to the living standards of ordina...
School meals were developed because of charitable, and subsequently official, concern about the effe...
School meals were developed because of charitable, and subsequently official, concern about the effe...