Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
A podcast by Oxford University
194 Episodes
-
The Danish Health Interview Surveys
Published: 1/20/2020 -
Materialities of eating disorders
Published: 1/20/2020 -
Boys, bulk and body ideals: epidemiology of muscle-enhancing and disordered eating behaviours in US adolescents
Published: 1/20/2020 -
Nutrition and aging well: evidence from centenarians
Published: 1/20/2020 -
Materialities of food education: practice, research and policy
Published: 1/20/2020 -
Rights-based approaches to the regulation of food marketing
Published: 1/20/2020 -
Addressing childhood obesity using a family and community-based approach: The MEND programmes
Published: 7/1/2019 -
'Instruments and Institutions'. An interview on 'Evolving Human Nutrition'
Published: 7/1/2019 -
Energy balance behaviours: the role of emotions and emotion regulation
Published: 7/1/2019 -
Making Cultures Count: Following the Mayi Kuwayu National Study of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing
Published: 7/1/2019 -
How do we fix the food waste problem?
Published: 7/1/2019 -
Functions of fat. What are the determinants and what does it matter?
Published: 7/1/2019 -
Obesity, insecurity, inequality and social welfare
Published: 7/1/2019 -
Obesity and socioeconomic status
Published: 7/1/2019 -
From village chickens to maternal and child health
Published: 2/12/2019 -
Marion Nestle and Claude Fischler in conversation about commensality and the soda tax, Tokyo
Published: 2/12/2019 -
Sociality and aging
Published: 2/12/2019 -
How could it be otherwise? The body as a resource for exploring the past
Published: 2/12/2019 -
Ultra-processed Foods, Big Food and the Corporate Capture of Nutrition
Published: 2/12/2019 -
An interview with Professor Meg Warin on 'the Australian Senate Inquiry into Obesity'
Published: 2/12/2019
The Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) is an interdisciplinary research unit based at the University of Oxford, dedicated to understanding the complex and interwoven causes of obesity in populations across the world. This seminar series is hosted by the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford.