Bibliography

Coping with urban food insecurity: findings from Kampala, Uganda

Research carried out in two densely populated wards of Kampala, Uganda, in 2012 shows that food-insecure households dropped, or significantly decreased, their consumption of matoke, the plantain staple, soon after its availability declined and the market price rose. They shifted to a diet for which the base was a stiff maize porridge (posho), eating just one meal a day. Many such households were headed by grandparents, single grandmothers especially. For the full set of household heads interviewed (118), access to rural family land (kibanja) stood out as critical for achieving year-round urban food security. With few exceptions, households that farmed ‘at home’, about half the sample, saw themselves as food secure. Access negotiations, however, could be difficult, especially for women. The growing number of grandparents responsible for raising grandchildren and nieces/nephews, many of whom were orphaned, has given rise to a new discourse whereby care is increasingly given to maternal grandchildren. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]

Title: Coping with urban food insecurity: findings from Kampala, Uganda
Author: Pottier, Johan
Year: 2015
Periodical: Journal of Modern African Studies (ISSN 0022-278X)
Volume: 53
Issue: 2
Pages: 217-241
Language: English
Geographic term: Uganda
External link: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X1500018X
Abstract: Research carried out in two densely populated wards of Kampala, Uganda, in 2012 shows that food-insecure households dropped, or significantly decreased, their consumption of matoke, the plantain staple, soon after its availability declined and the market price rose. They shifted to a diet for which the base was a stiff maize porridge (posho), eating just one meal a day. Many such households were headed by grandparents, single grandmothers especially. For the full set of household heads interviewed (118), access to rural family land (kibanja) stood out as critical for achieving year-round urban food security. With few exceptions, households that farmed ‘at home’, about half the sample, saw themselves as food secure. Access negotiations, however, could be difficult, especially for women. The growing number of grandparents responsible for raising grandchildren and nieces/nephews, many of whom were orphaned, has given rise to a new discourse whereby care is increasingly given to maternal grandchildren. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]