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Corbyn Besson is a pop singer-songwriter who became one-fifth of the boyband Why Don't We. In summer of 2017, they embarked on the Something Different Tour. Also a solo artist, he has a single on iTunes called "The Only One."
A riveting, deeply personal coloring book for 2021. In the stirring, highly anticipated first "Adult Coloring Book" series, Coloring Corbyn Besson tells the story of Corbyn Besson in an artistic and creative way through many beautiful designs and ornaments.
Why Don't We is an American boy band consisting of Zach Herron, Jack Avery, Daniel Seavey, Corbyn Besson, and Jonah Marais.
This Corbyn Besson Coloring Book features lots of beautiful illustrations that will keep you entertained and relaxed for hours.
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Marilyn Manson Color By Number Coloring Book Book features: Large size 8.5x11 inches High quality hand-drawn images Each image is printed on single-sided to prevent bleed-through Great for adults relaxing and stress relief
This book traces the Islamic healing tradition's interaction with Indian society and politics as they evolved in tandem from 1600 to 1900, and demonstrates how an in-house struggle for hegemony can be as potent as external power in defining medical, social and national modernity. This is a pioneering work on the social and medical history of Indian Islam.
This “remarkable, comprehensive” study of neoliberal agribusiness and the obesity epidemic “is critical reading for food studies scholars” (Contemporary Sociology). Obesity rates are rising across the United States and beyond. While some claim that people simply eat too much “energy-dense” food while exercising too little, The Neoliberal Diet argues that the issue is larger than individual lifestyle choices. Since the 1980s, the shift toward neoliberal regulation has enabled agribusiness multinationals to thrive by selling a combination of meat and highly processed foods loaded with refined flour and sugars—a diet that originated in the United States. Drawing on extensive empirical data, Gerardo Otero identifies the socioeconomic and political forces that created this diet, which has been exported around the globe at the expense of people’s health. Otero shows how state-level actions, particularly subsidies for big farms and agribusiness, have ensured the dominance of processed foods and made fresh foods inaccessible to many. Comparing agrifood performance across several nations, including the NAFTA region, and correlating food access to class inequality, he convincingly demonstrates the structural character of food production and the effect of inequality on individual food choices. Resolving the global obesity crisis, Otero concludes, lies not in blaming individuals but in creating state-level programs to reduce inequality and make healthier food accessible to all.
Ecological Public Health demonstrates that although public health medicine is useful and honourable, a radical rethink is required and is, indeed, starting to emerge. It aims to revitalize thinking about public health in terms of ecology, and calls for a concerted combined effort from existing disciplines to bring about reform.