传统食品,全球化,移民,公共和地球健康:Tejate的情况下,玉米和可可饮料在瓦哈加州

Challenges Pub Date : 2023-01-29 DOI:10.3390/challe14010009
D. Soleri, D. Cleveland, Flavio Aragón Cuevas, Violeta Jimenez, May-Choo Wang
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摘要

我们正处于一场前所未有的公共和地球卫生危机之中。这场危机的一个主要驱动因素是当前的营养转型——这是全球化和强大的跨国食品公司推动工业化农业和消费破坏环境和不健康的超加工食品和其他食品的产物。这导致了不健康的食物环境和与饮食有关的非传染性疾病的大流行,并对生物物理环境、生物多样性、气候和经济公平产生了负面影响。在从南半球到北半球的移民中,这种营养转变通常表现为饮食文化适应。然而,一些社区正在通过选择性地抵制全球化,在他们的新家重新创造他们的传统食物,并寻找习惯上用于制作食物的作物品种和品种,来对抗这种转变。这些社区包括来自墨西哥南部瓦哈卡州中央山谷的萨波特克移民,他们居住在加利福尼亚州的大洛杉矶。以传统和具有文化象征意义的饮料为重点,我们回顾了研究数据和文献,概述了传统食品在解决公共和地球健康危机中的作用的关键问题。我们的结论是,要回答这些问题,需要社区成员和科学家之间的跨国合作研究伙伴关系。这可以通过支持传统食品发挥积极作用并尽量减少其危害,重新调整公共和全球卫生工作的方向,使其更加公平、更具参与性和更有效。
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Traditional Foods, Globalization, Migration, and Public and Planetary Health: The Case of Tejate, a Maize and Cacao Beverage in Oaxacalifornia
We are in the midst of an unprecedented public and planetary health crisis. A major driver of this crisis is the current nutrition transition—a product of globalization and powerful multinational food corporations promoting industrial agriculture and the consumption of environmentally destructive and unhealthy ultra-processed and other foods. This has led to unhealthy food environments and a pandemic of diet-related noncommunicable diseases, as well as negative impacts on the biophysical environment, biodiversity, climate, and economic equity. Among migrants from the global south to the global north, this nutrition transition is often visible as dietary acculturation. Yet some communities are defying the transition through selective resistance to globalization by recreating their traditional foods in their new home, and seeking crop species and varieties customarily used in their preparation. These communities include Zapotec migrants from the Central Valleys of the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca living in greater Los Angeles, California. Focusing on the traditional and culturally emblematic beverage tejate, we review data from our research and the literature to outline key questions about the role of traditional foods in addressing the public and planetary health crisis. We conclude that to answer these questions, a transnational collaborative research partnership between community members and scientists is needed. This could reorient public and planetary health work to be more equitable, participatory, and effective by supporting a positive role for traditional foods and minimizing their harms.
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