“…That is, they are directed at the level of the population, they constitute individuals and groups as "problems" and domains of governance needing the assistance of health promotion "experts," they are systematic, calculated and directed at defined ends, they emerge from the state but are also articulated by associated independent institutions and agencies. (Lupton, 1995, p. 49) Moreover, elements of a governmentality approach have been applied to a number of arenas of health and human welfare, including obesity and the use of the body mass index (Evans & Colls, 2009), HIV/AIDS education (Schee & Baez, 2009), learning disabilities (Gilbert, Cochrane, & Greenwell, 2005), nursing (Clinton & Hazelton, 2002;Holmes & Gastaldo, 2002;Winch, Creedy, & Chaboyer, 2002), hormone replacement therapy (Harding, 1998), mental health and psychiatry (McCallum, 1998;Tyler, 1998), and eating disorders (Eckermann, 1998).…”