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1.
Med Humanit ; 50(2): 285-291, 2024 Aug 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38561220

RESUMO

This article engages with the maternal education politics in late colonial Sri Lanka by looking at the implementation of maternal health in the gendered syllabus of middle-class girls' schools. After decades of gender-specific education, the 1930s saw a homogenisation of teachings in these schools through the impact of Mary Rutnam's health manuals. Rutnam was a Canadian doctor who had been living in Sri Lanka for most of her adult life and was seen as a local. She was also active in establishing women's and girls' organisations and political groups. Especially the Lanka Mahila Samiti (LMS) was greatly influential and still is today. The LMS specifically aims at educating the rural women in maternal health and other forms of hygiene with the goal to increase their political and cultural agency. This article examines the relationship between Rutnam's handbooks for girls' schools and the globality of the discourse of motherhood, on the one hand, and the hierarchical divide between the urban middle-class woman and the rural woman, on the other hand. I will argue that by applying the classist discourse of eugenics and hygiene, the teaching of maternal health was transformed in Sri Lanka to create a notion of motherhood that was detached from religion, as it previously was so often framed by it but was highly racialised and classist. This notion of motherhood continues to exist and informs the teaching of sexuality in contemporary Sri Lankan middle-class girls' schools.


Assuntos
População Rural , Humanos , Sri Lanka , Feminino , História do Século XX , População Rural/história , Saúde Materna/história , Instituições Acadêmicas/história , Mães , Higiene/história , Canadá , Política , Colonialismo/história
2.
Technol Cult ; 65(3): 843-867, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39034907

RESUMO

Using scrapbooks created by members of the Women's Institute in England in 1965, this article offers a rare insight into women's lived experience and interaction with new technologies and services, in domestic and communal spaces, which show how rural women diligently recorded the new behaviors, emotions, and challenges surrounding rural life. Scrapbookers show multiple and sometimes contradictory attitudes, representing themselves as modern housewives proficient with new consumer durables, while also critiquing the inequalities heralded by new goods and services. Rural women were not simply bystanders to technological change but represented themselves as both consumers and producers of new forms of knowledge, through their use of material culture. Scrapbookers used their creations to archive the emotional labor they performed in their homes and communities, illuminating an important but often overlooked component of consumption.


Assuntos
População Rural , Inglaterra , História do Século XX , População Rural/história , Humanos , Tecnologia/história , Mulheres/história , Mulheres/psicologia , Feminino , Saúde da Mulher/história
3.
J Epidemiol ; 31(2): 101-108, 2021 02 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31983720

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Previous Japanese studies have led to the erroneous conclusion of antioxidant capacity (AOC) intakes of the overall Japanese diet due to limitations in the number and types of food measured, especially in rice and seafood intake. The aims of the study were to construct an AOC database of foods representative of the typical Japanese diet and to clarify the high contributors to AOC intake from the overall diet of the Japanese population. METHODS: Commonly consumed foods were estimated using 3-day dietary records (DRs) over the four seasons among 55 men and 58 women in Japan. To generate an AOC database suitable for the typical Japanese diet, hydrophilic (H-)/lipophilic (L-) oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) values of foods in each food group were measured via validated methods using the food intake rankings. Subsequently, we estimated the AOC intake and the AOC characteristics of a typical Japanese diet. RESULTS: Of 989 food items consumed by the participants, 189 food items were measured, which covered 78.8% of the total food intake. The most commonly consumed types of antioxidant-containing food were tea, soybean products, coffee, and rice according to H-ORAC, and soybean products, fish and shellfish, vegetables, and algae according to L-ORAC. CONCLUSIONS: The characteristics of high AOC intake in rice and seafood more appropriately reflected the Japanese-style diet. Further studies are expected to clarify the association between food-derived AOC and its role in preventing or ameliorating lifestyle-related diseases.


Assuntos
Antioxidantes/administração & dosagem , Dieta/história , Fazendeiros/história , População Rural/história , Idoso , Dieta/estatística & dados numéricos , Registros de Dieta , Fazendeiros/estatística & dados numéricos , Feminino , História do Século XX , Humanos , Japão , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos
4.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 174(3): 463-478, 2021 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33105032

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study is to apply pubertal stage estimation methods to a sample from a rural community: the post-medieval Dutch skeletal collection from Middenbeemster. Puberty is a key developmental period involving transition to physical adulthood with broad societal relevance through its impact on fertility, morbidity, and mortality. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Individuals (n = 55), including 27 of known sex and age-at-death, between the ages of 8 and 25 years were assessed for six skeletal markers indicative of pubertal growth spurt. Recent novel osteoarchaeological methods from Shapland and Lewis are used to reconstruct the timing and duration of pubertal stages. RESULTS: Pubertal acceleration occurred earlier in females (10.38 years, n = 8) than males (13.30 years, n = 6), whereas maturation occurred later in males (21.36 years, n = 11) than females (19.30 years, n = 5). Onset appears earlier and completion later compared to other archaeological skeletal samples with osteoarchaeological evidence of puberty. Age shortly after menarche was reconstructed at 20.45 years, substantially later than historic records and bioarchaeological research reports suggest. CONCLUSION: This early onset and late completion caused a "stretch" of the overall duration of puberty compared to other collections, especially of the last three stages. This prolonged development is reflected in historically known social expectations for the Netherlands, for example, that marriage and children should not occur before about 22-23 years of age. Increasing the range of past peoples with puberty stage reconstruction will permit more insightful interpretations of the biological and cultural patterns of this important life stage.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento do Adolescente/fisiologia , Osso e Ossos/anatomia & histologia , População Rural/história , Adolescente , Adulto , Determinação da Idade pelo Esqueleto , Antropologia Física , Cemitérios/história , Criança , Feminino , História do Século XIX , Humanos , Masculino , Países Baixos , Adulto Jovem
5.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 171(4): 628-644, 2020 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31925961

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Age-degenerative features of the metatarsals are poorly known despite the importance of metatarsal bone properties for investigating mobility patterns. We assessed the role of habitual activity in shaping the patterning and magnitude of sexual dimorphism in age-related bone loss in the hallucal metatarsal. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cross-sections were extracted at midshaft from micro-computed tomography scan models of individuals from medieval rural (Abingdon Vineyard) and early industrial urban (Spitalfields) settings (n = 71). A suite of cross-sectional geometry dimensions and biomechanical properties were compared between populations. RESULTS: The rural group display generally stronger and larger metatarsals that show a greater capacity to resist torsion and that have comparatively greater bending strength along the medio-lateral plane. Men in both groups show greater values of cortical area than women, but only in the urban group do men show lower magnitudes of age-related decline compared to females. Women in rural and urban populations show different patterns of age-related decline in bone mass, particularly old women in the urban group show a marked decline in cortical area that is absent for women in the rural group. DISCUSSION: Lifetime exposure to hard, physical activity in an agricultural setting has contributed to the attainment of greater bone mass and stronger bones in young adults. Furthermore, over the life-course, less of this greater amount of bone is lost, such that sustained activity levels may have acted to buffer against age-related decline, and this is most pronounced for women, who are expected to experience greater bone loss later in life than men.


Assuntos
Exercício Físico , Hallux/patologia , Ossos do Metatarso/patologia , Osteoporose/história , População Rural/história , População Urbana/história , Adulto , Fatores Etários , Idoso , Feminino , História do Século XVIII , História do Século XIX , História Medieval , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Osteoporose/patologia , Fatores Sexuais , Adulto Jovem
6.
Am J Epidemiol ; 187(4): 639-646, 2018 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28595333

RESUMO

This article examines how the epidemiologic transition and the reduction of the urban mortality penalty gave rise to the current mortality regime of the United States and demonstrates how the 1918 influenza pandemic signaled its advent. This article approaches those issues through the analysis of urban-rural mortality differentials from 1890 to 1930. Until 1910, infectious diseases dwarfed degenerative diseases in leading causes of death, and generally, the more urban the location was, the higher infectious disease and overall death rates were-a direct relationship. But by 1930, degenerative diseases had eclipsed infectious diseases, and infectious disease mortality had ceased to differ between cities and rural areas. The 1918 influenza pandemic broke out toward the end of these changes, and the larger the city was, the lower influenza and overall death rates were in that year-an inverse relationship. Such gradations characterized a new mortality regime emerging in the late 1910s and foreshadowed urban-rural mortality differentials in 1930 among persons aged 45 years or older, the group whose high rates of degenerative disease death would symbolize that regime. Thus, intertwined changes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries-a shift in leading causes of death from infectious diseases to degenerative diseases and a concomitant shift from a direct relationship to an inverse relationship between urban environment and mortality-produced the current mortality regime of the United States.


Assuntos
Doenças Transmissíveis/história , Mortalidade/história , População Rural/história , População Urbana/história , Causas de Morte , Doenças Transmissíveis/epidemiologia , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Influenza Humana/epidemiologia , Influenza Humana/história , Doenças não Transmissíveis/epidemiologia , Pandemias , Características de Residência/estatística & dados numéricos , População Rural/tendências , Estados Unidos/epidemiologia , População Urbana/tendências
7.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 162(2): 208-228, 2017 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27696351

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: The current understanding of child morbidity in Roman England is dominated by studies of single sites/regions. Much of the data are derived from third to fifth century AD Poundbury Camp, Dorchester, Dorset, considered an unusual site due to high levels of non-adult morbidity. There is little understanding of children in rural areas, and whether Poundbury Camp was representative of Romano-British childhood. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study provides the first large scale analysis of child health in urban and rural Roman England, adding to the previously published intra-site analysis of non-adult paleopathology at Poundbury Camp. Age-at-death and pathology prevalence rates were reassessed for 953 non-adults (0-17 years) from five major urban, six minor urban, and four rural sites (first to fifth century AD). The data were compared to the results from 364 non-adults from Poundbury Camp. RESULTS: Rural sites demonstrated higher levels of infant burials, and greater prevalence of cribra orbitalia in the 1.1-2.5 year (TPR 64.3%), and 6.6-10.5 year cohorts (TPR 66.7%). Endocranial lesions were more frequent in the minor urban sample (TPR 15.9%). Three new cases of tuberculosis were identified in urban contexts. Vitamin D deficiency was most prevalent at Poundbury Camp (CPR 18.8%), vitamin C deficiency was identified more frequently in rural settlements (CPR 5.9%). DISCUSSION: The Poundbury Camp data on morbidity and mortality are not representative of patterns in Roman England and other major urban sites. Rural children suffered from a distinct set of pathologies described as diseases of deprivation, prompting reconsideration of how Romano-British land management affected those at the bottom of the social hierarchy.


Assuntos
Saúde da Criança/etnologia , Saúde da Criança/história , População Rural/história , População Urbana/história , Adolescente , Osso e Ossos/patologia , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Inglaterra , História Medieval , Humanos , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Paleopatologia , Escorbuto , Tuberculose , Deficiência de Vitamina D
8.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 164(4): 763-775, 2017 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28940226

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Paleopathological studies of leprosy in Danish skeletal collections show that many individuals suffered from this stigmatized disease during the Middle Ages. This study examines the risk of death associated with leprotic infection in individuals from the Danish rural cemetery of Øm Kloster (AD 1172-1536). Specifically, we modeled the influence of leprotic infection on age-specific mortality accounting also for sex and social status (lay person / monastic). MATERIALS AND METHODS: The sample consisted of 311 adult individuals from the Øm Kloster skeletal collection housed at the Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Southern Denmark (ADBOU). We modeled morbidity and mortality using a three-state illness-death model with the following parameterizations for the three transition hazards: (1) nonlesioned to lesioned: constant; (2) nonlesioned to dead: Gompertz-Makeham; and (3) lesioned to dead: Gompertz-Makeham, directly proportional to the hazard of the well to dead transition. RESULTS: The mortality hazard of lesioned individuals exceeded that of nonlesioned individuals by a factor of 1.4 (40%) across all individuals, 1.7 for females, 1.0 for males, 1.3 for lay persons, and 1.7 for monastics. Overall, 15% of the sample died with skeletal manifestations of leprosy, though it is likely that a higher percentage of the population carried the bacterium. DISCUSSION: This study improves understanding of past health and population dynamics focusing on a chronic infectious disease. The methods employed could informatively be applied to larger analyses of community health from skeletal collections by incorporating more than one disease into the multistate model and inferring individual frailty using various skeletal markers.


Assuntos
Hanseníase/história , Hanseníase/mortalidade , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Antropologia Física , Osso e Ossos/patologia , Cemitérios/história , Dinamarca/epidemiologia , Feminino , História Medieval , Humanos , Hanseníase/epidemiologia , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Paleopatologia , População Rural/história , Adulto Jovem
9.
J Biosoc Sci ; 49(1): 69-82, 2017 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26883942

RESUMO

In some situations the use of isonymy is the best strategy for studying the genetic structure of a population and its biological history. In this study different population parameters were calculated for one of the most isolated valleys in the Pyrenees - the region of the Alta Ribagorça in Catalonia, Spain. Surnames from marriage records covering the continuous period from 1638 to 1988 were used. From 1950 onwards this region underwent important social, economic and biological changes related to the introduction of hydroelectric and mining industries, and the change from livestock farming to a society based on services. Two periods were analysed (1638-1950 and 1951-1988) allowing population changes that occurred in the region to be determined. The study focused on calculating the number of surnames by gender, diversity index (H), population sub-structure (RP-RPr)/RPr and inbreeding coefficient (F t) and detection of possible genetic barriers. The results demonstrate the importance that geography initially had in shaping the genetic structure of the population and how this was gradually replaced by other parameters such as roads or the social and economic importance of towns. An interesting phenomenon is that inbreeding has traditionally been associated with rural life, isolation and endogamy. However, for the Alta Ribagorça it was observed that in the second period, 1951-1988, inbreeding mainly depended on the composition of migrant groups and the reaction of the native population to the arrival of migrants from outside the region.


Assuntos
Consanguinidade , Genética Populacional , Nomes , População Rural , Demografia , Meio Ambiente , Feminino , Geografia , História do Século XVII , História do Século XVIII , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Casamento/história , População Rural/história , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , Espanha
10.
Psychiatr Danub ; 29(3): 379-382, 2017 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28949320

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Atropa belladonna (Engl. deadly nightshade, Cro. velebilje, bunika) is a plant containing pharmacologically active, potentially toxic alkaloids: atropine, hyocyamine and scopolamine. The risk of poisoning in children is important because of possible confusion of black/dark blue belladonna fruit berries with other edible berries. There are many reports in literature of accidental intoxication but no report on traditional intentional usage to achieve hallucinogenic effects. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Here we report purposeful ingestion of Atropa belladonna berries for hallucinatory effects among adolescents in Bjelovar region in north part of Croatia. This has been happening among children/adolescents while they were grazing animals. We visited a dozen villages in the region and spoke to the oldest mostly to the elderly residents. RESULTS: The existence of such abuse of Atropa belladonna berries in the first part of XX century was confirmed by eight narrators from five distinct places in the region. Interestingly this type of behavior had a specific name "bunanje", unknown in Croatian language, but clearly associated with local plant name bun or bunika. According to informants consumers of berries would develop delirium or hallucinations associated behavior, incoherent and meaningless speech. However nobody remembers any severe case of poisoning. At the regional hospital in Bjelovar in the Pediatric department, there is no record of poisoning with Atropa belladonna. To our knowledge this is the first report of intentional consumption of belladonna berries to achieve the hallucinogenic effect. CONCLUSIONS: The fact that the custom was observed in five distinct spots and it had its specific name "bunanje" suggest that those are not isolated random events but the type of practices; seasonal abuse of hallucinogenic berries of Atropa belladonna, among rural adolescents in the first part of XX century.


Assuntos
Atropa belladonna , Frutas , Alucinógenos/história , Extratos Vegetais/história , População Rural/história , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/epidemiologia , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/história , Adolescente , Criança , Croácia , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino
11.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 157(1): 107-20, 2015 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25613696

RESUMO

In the Roman period, urban and rural ways of living were differentiated philosophically and legally, and this is the first regional study of these contrasting life-ways. Focusing on frailty and mortality risk, we investigated how these differed by age, sex, and status, using coffin type as a proxy for social status. We employed skeletal data from 344 individuals: 150 rural and 194 urban (1st-5th centuries A.D.) from Dorset, England. Frailty and mortality risk were examined using indicators of stress (cribra orbitalia, porotic hyperostosis, nonspecific periostitis, and enamel hypoplastic defects), specific metabolic and infectious diseases (rickets, scurvy, and tuberculosis), and dental health (carious lesions and calculus). These variables were studied using Chi-square, Siler model of mortality, Kaplan-Meier analysis, and the Gompertz model of adult mortality. Our study found that overall, mortality risk and survivorship did not differ between cemetery types but when the data were examined by age, mortality risk was only significantly higher for urban subadults. Demographic differences were found, with urban cemeteries having more 0-10 and >35 year olds, and for health, urban cemeteries had significantly higher frequencies of enamel hypoplastic defects, carious lesions, and rickets. Interestingly, no significant difference in status was observed between rural and urban cemeteries. The most significant finding was the influence of the skeletal and funerary data from the Poundbury sites, which had different demographic profiles, significantly higher frequencies of the indicators of stress and dental health variables. In conclusion, there are significant health, demographic, and mortality differences between rural and urban populations in Roman Britain.


Assuntos
População Rural/história , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , População Urbana/história , População Urbana/estatística & dados numéricos , Adolescente , Adulto , Antropologia Física , Cemitérios , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , História Antiga , Humanos , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Estimativa de Kaplan-Meier , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Mundo Romano/história , Reino Unido/epidemiologia , Adulto Jovem
12.
J Biosoc Sci ; 47(1): 105-19, 2015 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24598531

RESUMO

Little is known about late 19th and early 20th century BMIs on the US Central Plains. Using data from the Nebraska state prison, this study demonstrates that the BMIs of dark complexioned blacks were greater than for fairer complexioned mulattos and whites. Although modern BMIs have increased, late 19th and early 20th century BMIs in Nebraska were in normal ranges; neither underweight nor obese individuals were common. Farmer BMIs were consistently greater than those of non-farmers, and farm labourer BMIs were greater than those of common labourers. The BMIs of individuals born in Plains states were greater than for other nativities, indicating that rural lifestyles were associated with better net current biological living conditions.


Assuntos
Negro ou Afro-Americano , Índice de Massa Corporal , História do Século XIX , População Branca , Adolescente , Adulto , Negro ou Afro-Americano/história , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Modelos Estatísticos , Nebraska , Prisões/história , População Rural/história , Magreza , População Branca/história , Adulto Jovem
13.
Soc Sci Res ; 49: 53-69, 2015 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25432603

RESUMO

This research investigates long-term consequences of early-life malnutrition by examining effects of the 1959-1961 Chinese Famine. Taking into account temporal and geographic variations in famine severity, we construct a difference-in-differences estimator to identify effects of early-life exposure to famine on perceived health and socioeconomic outcomes in midlife. Using a sample of 1716 adults born in 1955-1966 in rural China from a nationally representative survey-the 2005 Chinese General Social Survey-we find that the famine had adverse effects on mid-life health for males born into families where at least one parent was a Communist Party member and females regardless of parental party membership. Being born during the famine had no effects on years of education or income for either gender. Quantile regressions suggest intense mortality selection among males who had no party-affiliated parents. Our study highlights the importance of timing and contexts of life experiences in shaping health.


Assuntos
Saúde , Pais , Classe Social , Inanição , Adolescente , Adulto , Fatores Etários , Criança , Pré-Escolar , China/epidemiologia , Comunismo/história , Autoavaliação Diagnóstica , Feminino , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , População Rural/história , Fatores Sexuais , Inanição/história , Inanição/mortalidade , Taxa de Sobrevida , Adulto Jovem
17.
Psychol Sci ; 24(9): 1722-31, 2013 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23925305

RESUMO

The Google Books Ngram Viewer allows researchers to quantify culture across centuries by searching millions of books. This tool was used to test theory-based predictions about implications of an urbanizing population for the psychology of culture. Adaptation to rural environments prioritizes social obligation and duty, giving to other people, social belonging, religion in everyday life, authority relations, and physical activity. Adaptation to urban environments requires more individualistic and materialistic values; such adaptation prioritizes choice, personal possessions, and child-centered socialization in order to foster the development of psychological mindedness and the unique self. The Google Ngram Viewer generated relative frequencies of words indexing these values from the years 1800 to 2000 in American English books. As urban populations increased and rural populations declined, word frequencies moved in the predicted directions. Books published in the United Kingdom replicated this pattern. The analysis established long-term relationships between ecological change and cultural change, as predicted by the theory of social change and human development (Greenfield, 2009).


Assuntos
Evolução Cultural/história , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , Mudança Social/história , População Urbana/estatística & dados numéricos , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Psicologia Social , População Rural/história , Identificação Social , Reino Unido , Estados Unidos , População Urbana/história
18.
Am J Hum Biol ; 25(3): 318-28, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23382098

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: It has been suggested that epigenetic inheritance is an important factor influencing mortality. We use data about the historical population of Québec (years 1670-1740) to study whether parents modify their offspring's phenotype epigenetically prior to conception in response to predicted/perceived mortality. If so, children growing up in the predicted environment enjoy a phenotype-environment-match that should lower mortality, whereas children growing up in a nonpredicted environment should have a higher mortality. METHODS: We use the large urban-rural mortality differential to capture the predicted/perceived mortality environment. We categorize children into different groups by their migration status: conceived and living in the same environment (urban or rural); conceived in one but born in another environment (urban-to-rural or rural-to-urban); and born in one but migrating to another environment. We use Kaplan-Meier survival curves and fixed effect survival models to estimate to what extent child survival up to the age of 15 depends on migration status. RESULTS: Child mortality within families that moved from urban to rural areas does not depend on the child's migration status. Within families that moved to urban areas, children who were conceived and born in the rural areas exhibit the lowest mortality. This contradicts a phenotype-environment-mismatch scenario, which would result in higher rather than lower mortality. CONCLUSION: We do not find evidence for functional (adaptive) epigenetic inheritance. Migration into an environment with lower or higher extrinsic mortality affects child mortality within the families differently than predicted by the concept of epigenetic inheritance. The results suggest that epigenetic inheritance may not be important for child mortality among migrants.


Assuntos
Emigração e Imigração/história , Meio Ambiente , Epigênese Genética , Fenótipo , Dinâmica Populacional/história , Adolescente , Criança , Mortalidade da Criança , Pré-Escolar , Emigração e Imigração/estatística & dados numéricos , Feminino , História do Século XVII , História do Século XVIII , Humanos , Estimativa de Kaplan-Meier , Masculino , Idade Materna , Idade Paterna , Dinâmica Populacional/estatística & dados numéricos , Quebeque , População Rural/história , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , População Urbana/história , População Urbana/estatística & dados numéricos
19.
J Biosoc Sci ; 44(3): 273-88, 2012 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22030449

RESUMO

This paper demonstrates that although modern BMIs in the US have increased, 19th century BMIs in Philadelphia were lower than elsewhere within Pennsylvania, indicating that urbanization and agricultural commercialization were associated with lower BMIs. After controlling for stature, blacks consistently had greater BMI values than mulattos and whites; therefore, there is no evidence of a 19th century mulatto BMI advantage in the industrializing North. Farmers' BMIs were consistently heavier than those of non-farmers.


Assuntos
Negro ou Afro-Americano/história , Índice de Massa Corporal , População Urbana/história , População Branca/história , Adulto , Negro ou Afro-Americano/estatística & dados numéricos , Idoso , Feminino , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Saúde Ocupacional/história , Philadelphia , Preconceito , Prisões/história , População Rural/história , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , Fatores Socioeconômicos , População Urbana/estatística & dados numéricos , População Branca/estatística & dados numéricos
20.
Geogr J ; 178(1): 42-53, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22413172

RESUMO

The peri-urban area is the region where there is a more dynamic interaction between the urban and rural. The peri-urban area supplies natural resources, such as land for urban expansion and agricultural products to feed the urban population. In arid and semi-arid lands, such as northern Mexico, these areas may also be the source of water for the city's domestic demand. In addition, scholars argue that peri-urban residents may have a more advantageous geographical position for selling their labour and agricultural products in cities and, by doing so, sustaining their livelihoods. A considerable number of studies have examined the peri-urban to urban natural resources transfer in terms of land annexation, housing construction, and infrastructure issues; however, the study of the effects of the reallocation of peri-urban water resources to serve urban needs is critical as well because the livelihoods of peri-urban residents, such as those based on agriculture and livestock, depend on water availability. In the case of Hermosillo there is a tremendous pressure on the water resources of peri-urban small farm communities or ejidos because of urban demand. Based on interviews and structured surveys with producers and water managers, this paper examines how peri-urban livelihoods have been reshaped by the reallocation of the city's natural resources in many cases caused some ejido members or ejidatarios to lose livelihoods.


Assuntos
Agricultura , Abastecimento de Alimentos , Geografia , Renda , População Rural , Abastecimento de Água , Agricultura/economia , Agricultura/educação , Agricultura/história , Abastecimento de Alimentos/economia , Abastecimento de Alimentos/história , Geografia/economia , Geografia/educação , Geografia/história , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Renda/história , México/etnologia , População Rural/história , Fatores Socioeconômicos/história , Abastecimento de Água/economia , Abastecimento de Água/história , Abastecimento de Água/legislação & jurisprudência
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