The Malaysian society is undergoing rapid modernisation. The
emerging middle class in Malaysia is influencing the lifestyles and traditional food habits of the main three ethnics (i.e. Malays, Chinese, and Indians). This article studied the impact of compressed modernisation on food in a multicultural context. The Malaysian Food Barometer (MFB), published in the year 2014, focuses on the socio-cultural determinants of food habits in Malaysia.
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Article scientifique
Articles
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Malaysian Food Barometer (MFB) : a study of the impact of compressed modernisation on food habits
3 novembre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAY -
Charlas culinarias : Mexican women speak from their public kitchens
3 novembre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYBy exploring how working-class Mexican women transform their home cooking abilities into an economic resource to support themselves and their families, this paper looks at the philosophical approach women give to their entrepreneurial efforts.
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A conceptual model of the food and nutrition system
27 octobre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYThe integrated model developed here included three subsystems (producer, consumer, nutrition) and nine stages (production, processing, distribution, acquisition, preparation, consumption, digestion, transport, metabolism). The integrated model considers the processes and transformations that occur within the system and relationships between the system and other systems in the biophysical and social environments. The integrated conceptual model of the food and nutrition system presents food and nutrition activities as part of a larger context and identifies linkages among the many disciplines that deal with the food and nutrition system.
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How the microbiome challenges our concept of self
26 octobre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYToday, the three classical biological explanations of the individual self––the immune system, the brain, the genome––are being challenged by the new field of microbiome research. Evidence shows that our resident microbes orchestrate the adaptive immune system, influence the brain, and contribute more gene functions than our own genome. The realization that humans are not individual, discrete entities but rather the outcome of ever-changing interactions with microorganisms has consequences beyond the biological disciplines. In particular, it calls into question the assumption that distinctive human traits set us apart from all other animals––and therefore also the traditional disciplinary divisions between the arts and the sciences.
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Improving lifestyles sustainability through community gardening : results and lessons learnt from the JArDinS quasi-experimental study.
10 novembre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYDespite an increasing number of studies highlighting the health benefits of community gardening, the literature is limited by cross-sectional designs. The “JArDinS” quasi-experimental study aimed to assess the impact of community garden participation on the adoption of more sustainable lifestyles among French adults.
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Présentation du numéro 31 de la revue Communications « La nourriture, pour une anthropologie bioculturelle de l’alimentation »
27 octobre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAY"L’homme est un omnivore qui se nourrit de viande, de végétaux et d’imaginaire : l’alimentation ramène à la biologie mais, de toute évidence, elle ne s’y ramène pas ; le symbolique et l’onirique, les signes, les mythes, les fantasmes nourrissent, eux aussi, et ils concourent à régler notre nourriture. Dans l’acte alimentaire, homme biologique et homme social sont étroitement, mystérieusement, mêlés et intriqués."
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When collective action drives corporate social responsibility implementation in small and medium-sized enterprises : the case of a network of French winemaking cooperatives
23 novembre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYIncreasing attention has been given to the engagement of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in corporate social responsibility (CSR), yet little is known about collective SME actions to implement CSR. We conducted 29 semi-structured interviews to investigate a network of 18 French winemaking cooperatives. These SMEs are particularly interesting because they have traditionally operated on values similar to CSR principles. The case study explores how collective action was able to drive CSR implementation in the cooperatives over time. Our results highlight the mechanisms of collective action related to social capital and their impacts on cooperative relationships with key stakeholders. We also provide managerial recommendations for this type of CSR network.
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Frontières alimentaires et mets transfrontaliers. La pizza, questionnement d’un paradoxe
26 octobre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYAttestée depuis au moins le XVIe siècle à Naples, la pizza a connu au XXe siècle et plus particulièrement après la Seconde Guerre mondiale une diffusion quasi universelle. Met aux racines archaïques devenu étendard de la modernité, la pizza a traversé l’histoire comme les aires géographiques et culturelles. Pourtant, cet atypique comestible transfrontalier ne signe pas l’effacement des frontières : son adoption s’accompagne toujours d’un processus de réappropriation au cours duquel elle est pétrie de traits de culture locale et s’intègre harmonieusement dans un système de règles lui préexistant. Au terme de ce processus de réappropriation auquel la malléabilité inédite de la pizza laisse prise, le mets fait à nouveau frontière pour tout autre groupe que celui qui l’a travaillé et remis en forme. La pizza est un objet culturel qui offre un exemple particulièrement intéressant de la manière dont la diversité se maintient et se renouvelle dans le flux des emprunts, et permet dans le même temps de revisiter les scénarios d’homogénéisation culturelle et culinaire, ou l’effacement des frontières qu’induirait le processus de mondialisation. Le fait est piquant, relevons le, c’est tout justement la pizza qui, plus souvent qu’à son tour, est utilisée pour témoigner de l’érosion des spécificités culturelles.
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Does participating in community gardens promote sustainable lifestyles in urban settings ? Design and protocol of the JArDinS study.
10 novembre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYDespite growing evidence for the multiple health benefits of community gardening, longitudinal studies based on quantitative data are needed. Here we describe the protocol of JArDinS, a quasi-experimental study, aimed at assessing the impact of community garden participation (a natural experiment) in the adoption of more sustainable lifestyles.
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Recycling, recovering and preventing “food waste” : competing solutions for food systems sustainability in the United States and France
3 novembre 2021, par Mathilde COUDRAYDrawing on a distinction between “weak” and “strong” sustainability, this paper argues that “strong” prevention based on holistic changes in the food system is the most sustainable solution to food surplus and waste. It suggests that academics focus on strong food surplus prevention, but also that advocates encourage government and corporate actors to differentiate between weak and strong actions to diffuse strong sustainability across organizations and countries.