Nutrire CoLab,Burnett, D.Carney, M.A.Carruth, L.Chard, S.Dickinson, M.Gálvez, A.Garth, H.Hardin, J.Hite, A.Howard, H.Manderson, L.Mendenhall, E.Saldaña-Tejeda, A.Simmons, D.Valdez, N.Vasquez, E.Warin, M.Yates-Doerr, E.2020-02-102020-02-102020Bionatura, 2020; 5(1):1023-1-1023-21390-93471390-9355http://hdl.handle.net/2440/123252<jats:p>The Lancet Commissions are widely known as aspirational pieces, providing the mechanisms for consortia and networks of researchers to organize, collate, interrogate and publish around a range of subjects. Although the Commissions are predominantly led by biomedical scientists and cognate public health professionals, many address social science questions and involve social science expertise. Medical anthropologist David Napier was lead author of the Lancet Commission on Culture and Health (2014), for example, and all commissions on global health (https://www.thelancet.com/global-health/commissions) address questions of social structure, everyday life, the social determinants of health, and global inequalities.</jats:p>enCC BY SA. Revista Bionatura por Revista Bionatura se distribuye bajo una Licencia Creative Commons Atribución-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional. Basada en una obra en http://revistabionatura.com/. Permisos que vayan más allá de lo cubierto por esta licencia pueden encontrarse en http://revistabionatura.com/. Bionatura Magazine by Bionatura Magazine is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International License. Based on a work at http://revistabionatura.com/. Permissions that go beyond what is covered by this license can be found at http://revistabionatura.com/.Anthropologists Respond to The Lancet EAT CommissionJournal article100001357010.21931/RB/2020.05.01.22-s2.0-85080146237516701Warin, M. [0000-0001-8766-1087]