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The Politics of Breastfeeding

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Every 30 seconds a baby dies from infections due to a lack of breastfeeding and the use of bottles, artificial milks and other risky products. This book exposes infant feeding as one of the most im...
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  • 01 April 2009
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As revealing as "Freakonomics", shocking as "Fast Food Nation" and thought provoking as "No Logo", "The Politics of Breastfeeding" exposes infant feeding as one of the most important public health issues of our time. Every thirty seconds a baby dies from infections due to a lack of breastfeeding and the use of bottles, artificial milks and other risky products. In her powerful book Gabrielle Palmer describes how big business uses subtle techniques to pressure parents to use alternatives to breastmilk. The infant feeding product companies' thirst for profit systematically undermines mothers' confidence in their ability to breastfeed their babies. An essential and inspirational eye-opener, "The Politics of Breastfeeding" challenges our complacency about how we feed our children and radically reappraises a subject which concerns not only mothers, but everyone: man or woman, parent or childless, old or young. It is the 3rd fully revised and updated edition.
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Price: $17.95
Pages: 432
Publisher: Global Book Sales
Imprint: Montag & Martin
Publication Date: 01 April 2009
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.30 in
ISBN: 9781905177165
Format: Paperback
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Gabrielle Palmer is a nutritionist and a campaigner. She was a breastfeeding counsellor in the 1970s and helped establish the UK pressure group Baby Milk Action. In the early 1980s she lived and worked as a volunteer in Mozambique. She has written, taught and campaigned on infant feeding issues, particularly the unethical marketing of baby foods. In the 1990s she co-directed the International Breastfeeding: Practice and Policy course at The Institute of Child Health in London until she went to live in China for two years. She has worked independently for various health and development agencies, including serving as HIV and Infant Feeding Officer for UNICEF New York. She recently worked at The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine where she had originally studied nutrition. She is a mother and a grandmother.
preface to the third edition
why breastfeeding is political
the right to call ourselves mammals: the importance of biology
how breastfeeding works - and how it was damaged
beauty, breasts and books
a taste for infant feeding
it's not just the milk that counts
your generous donations could do more harm than good
hiv and breastfeeding
life, death and birth
population, fertility and sex
from the stone age to steam engines: a gallop through history
other women's babies: wet nursing
the industrial revolution in britain: the era of progress?
markets are not created by god
the lure of the global market
what is the code?
power struggles
dying for the code
documents and declarations
work, economics and the value of mothering
ecology, waste and greed
epilogue