Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans

America's growing concern about fatness during the twentieth century developed in parallel with a society that made it increasingly harder to live a healthy lifestyle. Since the 1970s, sweeping political, economic, cultural, and familial changes have occurred in the United States. Many resear...

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Main Author: Harrell, Baker Christian
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26059
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-260592015-09-20T17:25:30ZBeyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of AmericansHarrell, Baker ChristianObesityHealth educationSocial movementsSocial movementPublic healthSocial marketingYouth obesityFitnessAerobicsHealth promotionOverweightYouth overweightSocial changeCulture changeSocial movement studiesAmerica's growing concern about fatness during the twentieth century developed in parallel with a society that made it increasingly harder to live a healthy lifestyle. Since the 1970s, sweeping political, economic, cultural, and familial changes have occurred in the United States. Many researchers argue that these changes have created an "obesogenic" environment that has contributed to the increased prevalence of overweight and obesity in America by favoring inactivity and the over consumption of highly-processed, calorie-dense foods and beverages. As a result, the field of public health has increasingly begun to recognize obesity as a "societal disease." In 2001, The Surgeon General's Call to Action to Prevent and Decrease Overweight and Obesity categorized the number of overweight and obese Americans as reaching "nationwide epidemic proportions." Since that time, America has waged an all-out "war on obesity." Instead of a broader emphasis on health promotion, some public health researchers have suggested that this heightened focus on obesity is 1) guided by America's historically-rooted social disdain for fatness and 2) insufficient to improve the healthy lifestyles of Americans. In searching for a solution to the so-called "obesity epidemic," a growing number of researchers have begun to look to models of social change. After an introductory chapter describing the scope of the problem, this dissertation provides an historical analysis of two, relevant social change models. The first historical case study is an examination of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's VERB social marketing campaign. The second study explores the model of social movements through the history of the aerobics "boom" of 1970s America. Based on these histories, this dissertation concludes by proposing a blended approach that harnesses the strengths of both models to organize and advance America's healthy living movement.text2014-09-22T15:18:54Z2014-082014-09-11August 20142014-09-22T15:18:54ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26059
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Obesity
Health education
Social movements
Social movement
Public health
Social marketing
Youth obesity
Fitness
Aerobics
Health promotion
Overweight
Youth overweight
Social change
Culture change
Social movement studies
spellingShingle Obesity
Health education
Social movements
Social movement
Public health
Social marketing
Youth obesity
Fitness
Aerobics
Health promotion
Overweight
Youth overweight
Social change
Culture change
Social movement studies
Harrell, Baker Christian
Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans
description America's growing concern about fatness during the twentieth century developed in parallel with a society that made it increasingly harder to live a healthy lifestyle. Since the 1970s, sweeping political, economic, cultural, and familial changes have occurred in the United States. Many researchers argue that these changes have created an "obesogenic" environment that has contributed to the increased prevalence of overweight and obesity in America by favoring inactivity and the over consumption of highly-processed, calorie-dense foods and beverages. As a result, the field of public health has increasingly begun to recognize obesity as a "societal disease." In 2001, The Surgeon General's Call to Action to Prevent and Decrease Overweight and Obesity categorized the number of overweight and obese Americans as reaching "nationwide epidemic proportions." Since that time, America has waged an all-out "war on obesity." Instead of a broader emphasis on health promotion, some public health researchers have suggested that this heightened focus on obesity is 1) guided by America's historically-rooted social disdain for fatness and 2) insufficient to improve the healthy lifestyles of Americans. In searching for a solution to the so-called "obesity epidemic," a growing number of researchers have begun to look to models of social change. After an introductory chapter describing the scope of the problem, this dissertation provides an historical analysis of two, relevant social change models. The first historical case study is an examination of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's VERB social marketing campaign. The second study explores the model of social movements through the history of the aerobics "boom" of 1970s America. Based on these histories, this dissertation concludes by proposing a blended approach that harnesses the strengths of both models to organize and advance America's healthy living movement. === text
author Harrell, Baker Christian
author_facet Harrell, Baker Christian
author_sort Harrell, Baker Christian
title Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans
title_short Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans
title_full Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans
title_fullStr Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans
title_full_unstemmed Beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of Americans
title_sort beyond obesity : historical, social change approaches to improve the fitness of americans
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26059
work_keys_str_mv AT harrellbakerchristian beyondobesityhistoricalsocialchangeapproachestoimprovethefitnessofamericans
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