The Atlas of Food: Who Eats What, Where and Why (The Earthscan Atlas)

The Atlas of Food: Who Eats What, Where and Why (The Earthscan Atlas)

by Tim Lang (Author), Erik Millstone (Author)

Synopsis

Food is vital for our health and welfare, and its production critically affects the environment as well as the wealth of nations. Despite a rapid increase in trade, hundreds of millions of people remain hungry, while chronic obesity is increasing worldwide. Much of the grain that could amply feed the world's population is fed instead to cattle to satisfy the rich world's appetite for meat. New technologies, such as GM crops, promise to increase food production, but are they completely safe? How do markets work, and whose vested interests are at stake? What are the impacts of different forms of farming, processing, transportation, retailing and changing eating habits? Vividly presented through the creative use of maps and graphics, this atlas provides clear, authoritative and comprehensive accounts of the food chain - from plough to plate - and reveals how it affects the lives and livelihoods of us all, farmers and suburban shoppers alike.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 17 Dec 2002

ISBN 10: 1853839655
ISBN 13: 9781853839658

Media Reviews
'Impressive and far-ranging, an extremely useful and comprehensive, if disturbing, read.' Financial Times 'Fascinating and comprehensive.' New Agriculturist 'This splendid presentation of deeply worrying data and trends should be a wake-up call.' Times Higher Education Supplement 'An extraordinarily clear basis for understanding the underlying issues, this vital study clearly shows how threatened the security of the food supply chain has become in a globally interconnected world.' Ecologist 'A unique and easily accessible insight into the way our world food system works. This splendid presentation of deeply worrying data and trends should be a wake-up call.' Times Higher Education Supplement 'A remarkable book that reveals with devastating clarity the bizarre way the world feeds itself. The quest to find out just what's happening to our food is no longer a journey without maps.' The Food Programme, BBC Radio 4 'A fascinating book which gives global perspective on food and its production and supply... extremely well illustrated with maps and graphs.' Nutrition and Food Science 'The Atlas of Food provides an authoritative account of the food chain.' Food Manufacture 'This is a terrific resource for those who want to know all about how the world feeds itseld, who produces what and where it goes. A comprehensive study.' Health Food Business 'An indispensable and authoritative guide, arguably the best single book on the subject and hence one that every reader of this review should have.' Scientific and Medical Network 'This book is a fascinating read not just for members of the food industry, but for anyone who wants to know who eats what, where and why. Surely that means just about everyone.' International Food Ingredients 'A valuable source of information on a wide range of dimensions comprising the human food chain.' Progress in Human Geography 'This publication should become an institution.' Biological Agriculture and Horticulture 'Packed with raw data presented in a high accessible and colorful way' Energy and Environmental Management 'This excellent book by University of Sussex Reader of Science Policy, Erik Millstone and City University Professor of Food Policy and media food pundit, Tim Lang does much more than its title suggests.' P.J.C. Harris, Agriculture and Horticulture, 2003. 'This book is both highly informatie and great fun. It is a classic 'did you know?' book. If you read it you will not be able to resist asking anyone around you the 'did you know?' question.' P.J.C. Harris, Agriculture and Horticulture, 2003. 'This is a book that should also interest the wider general public....every school and college, from primary schools to universities, in every country of the world should buy a copy for its library immediately. This publication should become an institution and I should like to be looking forward to an updated The Atlas of Food 2005.' P.J.C. Harris, Agriculture and Horticulture, 2003.
Author Bio
Erik Millstone is Senior Lecturer in Science Policy at the University of Sussex and an authority on the politics and science of food production. Tim Lang is Professor of Food Policy at Thames Valley University and works on food policy and the public interest.