DuncumB.M., “Some Notes on the History of Lactation,”Brit. Med. Bull., 5: 1141 (1947).
2.
ButzW., “Economic Aspects of Breast Feeding,” in MoselyW.H. ea., Nutrition and Human Reproduction(Plenum, New York, 1977).
3.
DugdaleA.E., and DoesselD.P., “Family Well-being and Infant Feeding” (unpublished paper, Department of Child Health, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia, n.d).
4.
WhitingJ.W.M., and Childl.L., Child Training and Personality: a Cross Cultural Study(Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1953).
5.
McInturnL., and LambertW.W., Mothers of Six Cultures: Antecedents of Child Rearing, (John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1964).
6.
NerloveS.B., “Women's Workload and Infant Feeding Practices: A Relationship with Demographic Implications,”Ethnology, 13: 125–214 (1974).
7.
BarryH., Childl.L., and BaconM.K., “Relation of Child Training to Subsistence Economy,”American Anthropology, 61: 51–63 (1959),
8.
LeVineR., and LeVineB.B., Nyansongo: A Gusii Community in Kenya, (John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1966).
9.
WhitingB.B., ed., Six Cultures: Studies of Child Rearing(John Wiley and Co., New York, 1963).
10.
WickesI.G., “A History of Infant Feeding,”Arch. Dis. Childhood, 28: 151–158, 232-240, 495-502 (1953).
11.
AriesP., Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life, (Random House, Vintage Books, New York, 1962).
12.
PrinceJ., “Infant Feeding through the Ages,”Midwives Chronicle and Nursing Notes, Dec. 1976, pp. 283–285.
13.
WoodA.L., “The History of Artificial Feeding of Infants,”Journal Amer. Dieter Assoc., 31: 474–182 (1955).
14.
WallaceA.F.C., Rockdale: The Growth of on American Village in the Early Industrial Revolution(Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1972).
15.
SehringD.A., “Infant Feeding Trends in an Industrialized Culture,”Mod. Prob. Paediat., 15 (1975): 231–237.
16.
MeyerH., “Breastfeeding in the United States,”Clin. Pediat., 7: 708–715 (1968).
17.
UnderwoodB.A., Van ArsdellH., BlumenstielE., and ScrimshawN.S., “Implications of Available Information on Breast-feeding Worldwide” (paper presented at the International Symposium on Infant and Child Feeding, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich, USA, 1978).
18.
HondershotG.E., “Trends in Breastfeeding,”Advanced Data, Vital and Health Statistics of the National Center for Health Statistics, PHS No. 59 (Washington, D.C., 1980).
19.
HelsingE., “Feeding Practices in Europe-Beliefs and Motivations and Possibilities for Change” (paper presented at the International Symposium on Infant and Child Feeding, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich., USA, 1978).
20.
WHO/UNICEF, part one of the working paper of the Meeting on Infant and Young Child Feeding(organized by WHO and UNICEF, Geneva, 1979).
21.
FerrisA., Ph.D. dissertation(Department of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass., USA, 1979).
22.
JeromeN.W., “Do Families and Women of the Third World Have the Right to Establish Their Own Priorities?” (paper presented at the Conference on Infant Formula in the Third World: Does It Serve a Useful Role? New York, 1979).
23.
PhayerT., Boke for Children (1510–1560).
24.
TigerL., and FoxR., The Imperial Animal(Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1971).
25.
GerlachL.P., “Milk, Movements and Multinationals: Complex Interactions and Social Responsibilities,” in Responsibilities of Multinational Corporations to Society, vol. III, proceedings of the Fifth Panel Discussion, Council of Better Business Bureaus, Washington, D.C.
26.
GerlachL.P., “The Flea and the Elephant: Protest, Response and Consequences in the Infant Formula Controversy, Transaction/Society special issue on food, agriculture, and development (1979).
27.
BergA., The Nutrition Factor: Its Role in National Development(The Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., 1973).
28.
HirschmannC., and SweetJ.A., “Social Background and Breastfeeding Among American Mothers, Social Biology, 21: 3957.
29.
RobertsonW.O., “Breastfeeding Practices: Some Implications of Regional Variations,”Amer. J. Publ. Health, 51: 1035–1042 (1961).
30.
SalberE.J., and FeinleibM., “Breastfeeding in Boston,”Pediatrics, 37: 299–303 (1966).
31.
YankauerA., BoekA., LawsonE.D., and IanniF.A.J., “Social Stratification and Health Practices in Child-bearing and Child Rearing,”Amer. J. Publ. Health, 48: 732–741 (1958).
32.
HarrisM., The Rise of Anthropological Theory, (Crowell, New York, 1968).
33.
WoodsC.M., and GravesT.D., The Process of Medical Change in a Highland Guatemalan Town, Latin American Studies, 21(University of California Press, Los Angeles, 1973).
34.
PeltoP J., and PeltoG.H.“Intracultural Diversity: Some Theoretical Issues,”Amer. Ethnologist, 2: 1–18 (1975).
35.
MohrerJ., “Breast and Bottle Feeding in an Inner-City Community: an Assessment of Perceptions and Practices,”Med. Anthro, 3: 125–145 (1979)
36.
JonesR.A.K., and BelseyE.M.“Breastfeeding in an Inner London Borough-A Study of Cultural Factors,”Soc. Sci. Med., 11: 175–179 (1977).
37.
BryanC., “The Impact of Kin, Friend and Neighbor Networks on Infantile Obesity” (Ph.D dissertation, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky., USA, 1978).
38.
PopkinB., and SolonF., “Income, Time, the Working Mother and Child Nutriture,”J. Trop. Pediat, 22: 156–165 (1976).
39.
DugdaleA. E., “ Breastfeeding in a South East Asian City,”Far East Med. J., 6: 230–234 (1970).
40.
MarchioneT., “A History of Breast-feeding Practices in the English-speaking Caribbean of the Twentieth Century,”Food and Nutr. Bull., 2 (2): 9–18 (1980).
41.
GreinerT., The Promotion of Bottle Feeding by Multinational Corporations, Cornell international Nutrition Monograph Series, No. 2(Cornet/University, Ithaca, N.Y., 1975).
42.
GreinerT., Regulation and Education.: Strategies for Solving the Bottle Feeding Problem, Cornell International Nutrition Monograph Series, No. 4(Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., 1977).
43.
GusslerJ.D., and Briesemeister, “The Insufficient Milk Syndrome: a Biocultural Explanation,”Med. Anthro., 4: 1–24 (1980).
44.
KlausM., and KennellJ., Maternal-Infant Bonding: The Impact of Early Separation or Loss on Family Development(C.V. Mosby, St. Louis, Mo., USA, 1976).
45.
NewtonM., and NewtonN., “The Normal Course and Management of Lactation,”Child and Family, vol. 9 (1) (1970).
46.
RaphaelD., The Tender Gift: Breast Feeding(Schocken Books, New York, 1976).
47.
NewtonN.R., and NewtonM., “Psychological Aspects of Lactation,”New Engl J. Med., 277: 1179–1188 (1967).
48.
JelliffeD.B., and JelliffeE.F.P., Human Milk in the Modern World, (Oxford University Press, London, 1978).
LeVineR., “Sex Roles and Economic Change in Africa,” in MiddletonJ., ed., Black Africa(Macmillan Co., New York, 1970), pp. 174–180.
51.
SandayP.R., “Female Status in the Public Domain,” in RosaldoM.Z., and LamphereL., eds, Women, Culture and Society(Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif., USA, 1974), pp. 189–206.
52.
EmberM., and EmberC.R., “The Conditions Favoring Matrilocal Versus Patrilocal Residence,”American Anthropologist, 73: 571–594 (1971).
53.
SchlegelA., Male Dominance and Female Autonomy(HRAF Press, New Haven, 1972).
54.
RosaldoM.Z, “Women, Culture and Society: A Theoretical Overview,” in RosaldoM.Z., and LamphereL., eds., Woman, Culture and Society(Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif., USA, 1974), pp. 17–42.
55.
JohnstonJ., “The Household Context of Infant Feeding Practices in South Trinidad” (paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Houston, Texas, 1977).
56.
JelliffeD.B., and JelliffeE.F.P., “The Uniqueness of Human Milk,”Am. J. Clin. Nutr., 24: 968–1024 (1971).
57.
ColeJ., “Breastfeeding in the Boston Suburbs in Relation to Personal-Social Factors,”Clin. Pediat., 16: 352–356 (1977).
58.
HalpernS.R., SellarsW.A., JohnsonR.B., AndersonD.W., SapersteinS., and ShannonS.Jr., “Factors Influencing Breastfeeding: Notes on Observations in Dallas, Texas,”South. Med. J., 65: 100–102 (1972).
59.
EvansN, WalpoleI.R., QureshiM.U., MemonM.H., and JonesH.W.E., “Lack of Breastfeeding and Early Weaning in Infants of Asian Immigrants to Wolverhampton,”Arch. of Dis. in Childhood, 51: 608–612 (1976).
60.
KarkalM.“Sociocultural and Economic Aspects of Infant Feeding,”Indian Pediatrics, 12: 13–19 (1975).
61.
CarvalloM., “World Health Organization Programs in Breast-feeding,” in RafaelD., ea., Breastfeeding and Food Policy in a Hungry World(Academic Press, New York, 1979), pp. 245–252.