Michael Clark
Researcher
Mike's research interests include the environmental, economic, and health impacts of food systems. He uses models to provide quantitative estimates on the current and projected impacts of the food system, as well as the potential benefits of changing the food system (e.g. by changing diets, or the rate at which yields increases).
Mike joined the Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention in August 2018, and is working on expanding the Centre's food system model to incorporate biodiversity and economic outcomes in collaboration with the Wellcome funded projected "Livestock, Environment and People", as well as with researchers from other departments across Oxford and international collaborators.
Mike holds a PhD in Natural Resources Science and Management from the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, and studied biology and ecology at undergraduate level.
Recent publications
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Multiple health and environmental impacts of foods.
Journal article
Clark MA. et al, (2019), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116, 23357 - 23362
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Food in the Anthropocene: the EAT-Lancet Commission on healthy diets from sustainable food systems.
Journal article
Willett W. et al, (2019), Lancet (London, England), 393, 447 - 492
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Climate change has likely already affected global food production.
Journal article
Ray DK. et al, (2019), PloS one, 14
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Options for keeping the food system within environmental limits.
Journal article
Springmann M. et al, (2018), Nature, 562, 519 - 525
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Feedlot diet for Americans that results from a misspecified optimization algorithm.
Journal article
Springmann M. et al, (2018), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115, E1704 - E1705