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Epigenetics and the embodiment of race: Developmental origins of US racial disparities in cardiovascular health. American Journal of Human Biology 21: 2–15.

      87 Landy, D. (1983). Medical anthropology: A critical appraisal. In: Advances in Medical Sciences (ed. J. Ruffini), Vol. 1, 185–314. New York: Gordon and Breach.

      88 Leatherman, T. (1994). Health implications of changing Agrarian economies in the Southern Andes. Human Organization 53 (4): 371–380.

      89 Leatherman, T. (1996). A biocultural perspective on health and household economy in Southern Peru. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 10 (4): 476–495.

      90 Leatherman, T. (2005). A space of vulnerability in poverty and health: Political ecology and biocultural analyses. Ethos 33 (1): 46–70.

      91 Leatherman, T. and Goodman, A. (2005). Coca-colonization of Diets in the Yucatan. Social Science and Medicine. 61: 833–846.

      92 Leatherman, T.L. and Goodman, A.H. (2011). Critical biocultural approaches in medical anthropology. In: Companion to Medical Anthropology (ed. M. Singer and P. Erickson), 29–48. New York: Blackwell.

      93 Leatherman, T., Goodman, A., and Stillman, T. (2019). A critical biocultural perspective on tourism and the nutrition transition in the Yucatan. In: Culture, Environment and Health in the Yucatan Peninsula: A Human Ecology Perspective (ed. H. Azcorra and F. Dickinson). 97–120 Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

      94 Leatherman, T. and Jernigan, K. (2014). Introduction: Biocultural contributions to the study of health disparities. Annals of Anthropological Practice 38 (2): 171–186.

      95 Leatherman, T. and Thomas, B.R. (2009). Structural violence, political violence and the health costs of civil conflict: A case study from Peru. In: Anthropology and Public Health: Bridging Differences in Culture and Society, 2nd edn (ed. R.A. Hahn and M.C. Inhorn), 196–220. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      96 Leonard, W. and Godoy, R. (2009). Tsimane’s Amazonian panel study. Economics and Human Biology 6 (2): 299–301.

      97 Levins, R. and Lewontin, R. (1985). The Dialectical Biologist. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

      98 Lock, M. (2017). Recovering the body. Annual Review of Anthropology 46: 1–14.

      99 Lynch, J. (2020). Regimes of Inequality: The Political Economy of Health and Wealth. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.

      100 Marmot, M. (2017). The health gap: Doctors and the social determinants of health. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health 45 (7): 686–693.

      101 Martinez, S. (1995). Peripheral Migrants: Haitians and Dominican Republic Sugar Plantations. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press.

      102 Martorell, R. (1989). Body size, adaptation and function. Human Organization 48: 15–20.

      103 Mazzeo, J., Rodlach, A., and Brenton, B. (2011). Introduction: Anthropologists confront HIV/AIDS and food insecurity in Sub-Saharan Africa. Annals of Anthropological Practice 35 (1): 1–7.

      104 McDade, T. (2002). Status incongruity in Samoan youth: A biocultural analysis of culture change, stress and immune function. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 16: 123–150.

      105 McDade, T. and Harris, K. (eds.) (2018). Biosocial pathways of well-being across the life course. RSF: The Russell Sage Journal of the Social Sciences 4: 4.

      106 Mendenhall, E. (2012). Syndemic Suffering: Social Distress, Depression, and Diabetes among Mexican Immigrant Women. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.

      107 Mendenhall, E. (2019). Rethinking Diabetes: Entanglements with Trauma, Poverty, and HIV. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.

      108 Mendenhall, E., Kort, B., Norris, S., Ndetei, D., and Prabhakaran, D. (2017). Non-communicable disease syndemics: Poverty, depression and diabetes among low- income populations. Lancet 2017 (389): 951–963.

      109 Mintz, S. (1985). Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History. New York: Viking Press.

      110 Mohatt, N.V., Thompson, A.B., Thai, N.D., and Tebes, J.K. (2014). Historical trauma as public narrative: A conceptual review of how history impacts present-day health. Social Science & Medicine 106: 128–136.

      111 Morgan, L. (1998). Latin American social medicine and the politics of theory. In: Building a New Biocultural Synthesis: Political- Economic Perspectives on Human Biology (ed. A.H. Goodman and T.L. Leatherman), 407–424. Ann Arbor, MI. University of Michigan Press.

      112 Navarro, V. (ed.) (2004). The Political and Social Contexts of Health. Amityville, New York: Baywood Publishing.

      113 Oths, K. (1998). Assessing variation in health status in the Andes: A biocultural model. Social Science and Medicine 47 (8): 1017–1030.

      114 Palsson, G. (2016). Unstable bodies: Biosocial perspectives on human variation. The Sociological Review Monographs 64 (1): 100–116.

      115 Panter-Brick, C., Eggerman, M., Mojadidi, A., and McDade, T. (2008). Social stressors, mental health and physiological stress in an urban elite of young Afghans in Kabul. American Journal of Human Biology 20: 627–641.

      116 Pelto, G.H. and Pelto, P.J. (1983). Diet and delocalization: Dietary changes since 1750. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 14: 507–528.

      117 Pelto, G.H. and Pelto, P.J. (1989). Small but healthy? An anthropological perspective. Human Organization 48 (1): 11–15.

      118 Petryna, A. (2005). Life Exposed: Biological Citizens After Chernobyl. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

      119 Pi-Sunyer, O. and Thomas, R.B. (1997). Tourism, environmentalism and cultural survival in Quintana Roo, Mexico. In: Life and Death Matters: Human Rights and the Environment at the End of the Millenium (ed. B. Johnston), 187–212. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press.

      120 Prussing, E. (2014). Historical trauma: Politics of a conceptual framework. Transcultural Psychiatry 51 (3): 436–458.

      121 Rabinow, P. (1996). Essays on the Anthropology of Reason. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

      122 Ravenscroft, J., Schell, L., and Cole, T. (2015). Applying the community partnership approach to human biology research. AJHB 27: 6–15.

      123 Rej, P., HEAT Steering Committee, Gravlee, C., and Mulligan, C. (2020). Shortened telomere length is associated with unfair treatment attributed to race in African Americans living in Tallahassee, Florida. AJHB 32: 3.

      124 Rose, N. and Novas, C. (2005). Biological citizenship. In: Global Assemblages: Technology, Politics and Ethics as Anthropological Problems (ed. A. Ong and S. Collier), 439–463. Oxford: Blackwell.

      125 Ruiz, E., Himmelgreen, D.A., Daza, N.R., and Pena, J. (2014). Using a biocultural approach to examine food insecurity on the context of economic transformation in rural Costa Rica. Annals of Anthropological Practice 38 (2): 232–249.

      126 Santos, R. and Coimbra, C. (1998). On the (un)natural history of the Tupi-Monde Indians: Bioanthropology and change in the Brazilian Amazon. In: Building a New Biocultural Synthesis: Political Economic Perspectives in Biological Anthropology (ed. A. Goodman and T. Leatherman), 269–294. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

      127 Schultz, A.J. and Mullings, L. (eds.) (2006). Gender, Race, Class and Health: Intersectional Approaches. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

      128 Sekler,

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