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Food insecurity in informal settlements in Lilongwe Malawi / by Emmanuel Chilanga, Liam Riley, Juliana Ngwira, Chisomo Chalinda & Lameck Masitala.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Urban Food Security SeriesPublisher: South Africa : African Food Security Urban Network, 2017Description: 42 pages : illustrations, color map ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781920597252 (Thermal Bound)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.19 CHI 23 018873
Contents:
1. Introduction -- 2. Urbanization in Malawi -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Household characteristics -- 5. Food sources and food purchasing patterns -- 6. Household food insecurity -- 7. Conclusion.
Summary: Although there is widespread food availability in urban areas across the Global South, it is not correlated with universal access to adequate amounts of nutritious foods. This report is based on a household survey conducted in 2015 in six low-income informal areas in Malawi's capital city, where three-quarters of the population live in informal settlements. Understanding the dimensions of household food insecurity in these neighbourhoods is critical to sustainable and inclusive growth in Lilongwe. The survey findings provide a complementary perspective to the 2008 AFSUN survey conducted in Blantyre, which suggested a level of food security in urban Malawi that was probably more typical of peri-urban areas where many people farm. Given that informal settlements house most of Malawi's urban residents, the Lilongwe research presents a serious public policy challenge for the country's leaders. Poverty is a profound problem in Malawi's rapidly expanding cities. Of particular concern is the poor quality of diets among residents of informal settlements. Precarity of income, reflected in the survey findings of frequent purchasing of staple foods and the need for food sellers to extend credit, appears to be a key driver of food insecurity in these communities. Economically inclusive growth, with better prospects for stable employment and protection for informal-sector workers, appears to be the surest route to improved urban food security in Malawi.
List(s) this item appears in: What’s on Your Plate: The Infrastructure of Eating in Cities
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore 338.19 CHI 018873 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 018873

1. Introduction -- 2. Urbanization in Malawi -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Household characteristics -- 5. Food sources and food purchasing patterns -- 6. Household food insecurity -- 7. Conclusion.

Although there is widespread food availability in urban areas across the Global South, it is not correlated with universal access to adequate amounts of nutritious foods. This report is based on a household survey conducted in 2015 in six low-income informal areas in Malawi's capital city, where three-quarters of the population live in informal settlements. Understanding the dimensions of household food insecurity in these neighbourhoods is critical to sustainable and inclusive growth in Lilongwe. The survey findings provide a complementary perspective to the 2008 AFSUN survey conducted in Blantyre, which suggested a level of food security in urban Malawi that was probably more typical of peri-urban areas where many people farm. Given that informal settlements house most of Malawi's urban residents, the Lilongwe research presents a serious public policy challenge for the country's leaders. Poverty is a profound problem in Malawi's rapidly expanding cities. Of particular concern is the poor quality of diets among residents of informal settlements. Precarity of income, reflected in the survey findings of frequent purchasing of staple foods and the need for food sellers to extend credit, appears to be a key driver of food insecurity in these communities. Economically inclusive growth, with better prospects for stable employment and protection for informal-sector workers, appears to be the surest route to improved urban food security in Malawi.

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