Renewed fears expressed by the United Nations about worldwide population growth have coincided with international concerns about the increased consumption of meat. This article, which draws upon long-term fieldwork in the Guatemalan highlands and ongoing scientific research in the Netherlands, examines the ways in which global organizations are framing and responding to these concerns. Economists generally address the problem of increased meat consumption through the language of ‘demand’, while nutritionists adopt the rhetoric of nutritional ‘needs’. Not only do these approaches tend to present meat - which in practice takes many forms - as a single substance, but they also flatten the nuanced relationships that exist between the eater and ...
The livestock sector is a major driver of climate change, accounting for 14.5% of anthropogenic gree...
Many societies are spoiled for choice when they purchase meat and other livestock products, and arou...
Since the mid-nineteenth century, human-animal relationships in industrial societies have been expos...
Originally written for a conference on meat attended by farmers, anthropologists, people involved in...
What Tony Weis (2007) describes as the process of ‘meatification’ of global diets implies that meat ...
Meat consumption patterns worldwide have dramatically changed over the past 50 years, putting pressu...
Humans come from a long line of meat-eaters. For much of the past two million years our hominid fore...
In the Guatemalan highlands, distinctions between human and animal are often irrelevant to the treat...
In introducing the papers in this special issue, the authors draw attention to the changing relation...
Both the global average per capita consumption of meat and the total amount of meat consumed are ris...
Humans come from a long line of meat-eaters. For much of the past two million years our hominid fore...
MEAT EATING IS a part of our evolutionary heritage. Recent field studies have shown that chimpanzees...
The growth of the global meat industry and the implications for climate change, food insecurity, wor...
Recent research has consistently related the production and consumption of meat with environmental d...
BackgroundHuman diet is increasingly acknowledged as a critical issue in global health and sustainab...
The livestock sector is a major driver of climate change, accounting for 14.5% of anthropogenic gree...
Many societies are spoiled for choice when they purchase meat and other livestock products, and arou...
Since the mid-nineteenth century, human-animal relationships in industrial societies have been expos...
Originally written for a conference on meat attended by farmers, anthropologists, people involved in...
What Tony Weis (2007) describes as the process of ‘meatification’ of global diets implies that meat ...
Meat consumption patterns worldwide have dramatically changed over the past 50 years, putting pressu...
Humans come from a long line of meat-eaters. For much of the past two million years our hominid fore...
In the Guatemalan highlands, distinctions between human and animal are often irrelevant to the treat...
In introducing the papers in this special issue, the authors draw attention to the changing relation...
Both the global average per capita consumption of meat and the total amount of meat consumed are ris...
Humans come from a long line of meat-eaters. For much of the past two million years our hominid fore...
MEAT EATING IS a part of our evolutionary heritage. Recent field studies have shown that chimpanzees...
The growth of the global meat industry and the implications for climate change, food insecurity, wor...
Recent research has consistently related the production and consumption of meat with environmental d...
BackgroundHuman diet is increasingly acknowledged as a critical issue in global health and sustainab...
The livestock sector is a major driver of climate change, accounting for 14.5% of anthropogenic gree...
Many societies are spoiled for choice when they purchase meat and other livestock products, and arou...
Since the mid-nineteenth century, human-animal relationships in industrial societies have been expos...