There is a great opportunity for doing a fees funded PHD at the Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen.
About the Project
This PhD will bring together critical sociology and public health nutrition approaches into dialogue by adopting an innovative mixed-method phenomenological research (MMPR) approach to examine the healthfulness and environmental sustainability of eating patterns of adults in Scotland across their lifecourses. The Scottish Government have a number of policies, such as the Good Food Nation, and provide nutritional guidance aimed at enhancing the healthfulness and sustainability of the nation’s diet by reducing consumption of meats, fat and salt and replacing this with fruit, vegetables and more sustainable meat alternatives. However, more work needs to be done if the aims of these initiatives are to be met. This PhD will add to the knowledge base that informs these policies and guidelines and therefore has the potential for achieving high impact.
The successful candidate will explore continuity and change in food practices across the lifecourse in order to identify when and why dietary revisions are more likely to be accurately informed by governmental guidelines on healthy and environmentally sustainable diets. Building on previous research conducted at the Rowett Institute and drawing on expertise from public health nutrition, the student will critically review existing literature and develop, with appropriate guidance, a means of assessing the degree to which people in Scotland hold an accurate understanding of governmental dietary guidelines for a healthy and environmentally sustainable diet. They will also conduct a systematic literature review of the nutrition-related work over the lifecourse in terms of targeted times for effective intervention. The phenomenological approach and life history interviews will provide new insights into the lived subjective experience of constructing and maintaining food practices in the messy context of everyday life across the lifecourses of research participants. The MMPR approach and the nutritional assessment tool will allow the student to identify: the facilitators and barriers to acquiring an accurate understanding of government guidelines for a healthy and sustainable diet; and when and why these dietary guidelines are likely to be accurately translated into healthy and sustainable eating practices.
Informal enquiries are encouraged, please contact the lead supervisor, Dr David Watts (d.watts@abdn.ac.uk) for further information.