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From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens

Food production has been a constant feature of food security policies. This narrative has continued despite findings showing that food insecurity is structural, and more driven by issues of access than availability, particularly for low-income households in cities who live in a cash economy. While u...

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Main Author: Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah
Other Authors: Battersby, Jane
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah
author2 Battersby, Jane
author_browse Battersby, Jane
Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah
author_facet Battersby, Jane
Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah
author_sort Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah
collection Thesis
description Food production has been a constant feature of food security policies. This narrative has continued despite findings showing that food insecurity is structural, and more driven by issues of access than availability, particularly for low-income households in cities who live in a cash economy. While usually considered a rural issue, the urban poor with low and unreliable incomes also face food insecurity which manifests differently to that of their rural counterparts. Thus, this creates the need to understand how the urban poor get their food. Garneton, a low-income area in Kitwe, Zambia, was chosen as the case study area for understanding the food system that feeds the urban poor. Fish and the fish value chain were used as the lens with which to understand the food system. The primary aim of the study was to understand the flow of fish in the food system and how it gets to low-income households in Kitwe. A qualitative methodology using semi-structured in-depth interviews was used. A bottom up and systems approach which started by finding out what the low-income consumers ate, and following the fish value chain systematically up to the producers enabled the study to capture the actual food system that feeds the poor and uncovered the different issues affecting the food system. The study had three main findings. The first finding was that the low-income households bought their food from both formal and informal markets but were more highly dependent on the informal markets. The factors that drove their purchasing decisions included income, proximity and volumes of fish sold. Secondly, the study also found that informal traders bought their fish mainly through the informal markets although the imported fish was bought from the formal market. Thirdly, the study found that there were a number of factors that affected the food system. These included policy, economic and environmental factors. The pathways of fish were also found to change in accordance with the fish ban. The thesis argues that, there is greater need to have policy that addresses the needs of the urban poor. Food should also be looked at as a cross cutting issue with different food systems perceived as complementing each other to addressing the food needs, particularly of the urban poor. Finally, more attention must be paid to the informal market which plays a significant role in meeting the food security needs of the urban poor.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/28177 From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah Battersby, Jane Environment, Society and Sustainability Food production has been a constant feature of food security policies. This narrative has continued despite findings showing that food insecurity is structural, and more driven by issues of access than availability, particularly for low-income households in cities who live in a cash economy. While usually considered a rural issue, the urban poor with low and unreliable incomes also face food insecurity which manifests differently to that of their rural counterparts. Thus, this creates the need to understand how the urban poor get their food. Garneton, a low-income area in Kitwe, Zambia, was chosen as the case study area for understanding the food system that feeds the urban poor. Fish and the fish value chain were used as the lens with which to understand the food system. The primary aim of the study was to understand the flow of fish in the food system and how it gets to low-income households in Kitwe. A qualitative methodology using semi-structured in-depth interviews was used. A bottom up and systems approach which started by finding out what the low-income consumers ate, and following the fish value chain systematically up to the producers enabled the study to capture the actual food system that feeds the poor and uncovered the different issues affecting the food system. The study had three main findings. The first finding was that the low-income households bought their food from both formal and informal markets but were more highly dependent on the informal markets. The factors that drove their purchasing decisions included income, proximity and volumes of fish sold. Secondly, the study also found that informal traders bought their fish mainly through the informal markets although the imported fish was bought from the formal market. Thirdly, the study found that there were a number of factors that affected the food system. These included policy, economic and environmental factors. The pathways of fish were also found to change in accordance with the fish ban. The thesis argues that, there is greater need to have policy that addresses the needs of the urban poor. Food should also be looked at as a cross cutting issue with different food systems perceived as complementing each other to addressing the food needs, particularly of the urban poor. Finally, more attention must be paid to the informal market which plays a significant role in meeting the food security needs of the urban poor. 2018-05-29T10:32:45Z 2018-05-29T10:32:45Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28177 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Environment, Society and Sustainability
Siyanga-Tembo, Fridah
From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens
thesis_degree_str Master's
title From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens
title_full From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens
title_fullStr From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens
title_full_unstemmed From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens
title_short From fork to farm: understanding Kitwe's food system through the fish lens
title_sort from fork to farm understanding kitwe s food system through the fish lens
topic Environment, Society and Sustainability
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28177
work_keys_str_mv AT siyangatembofridah fromforktofarmunderstandingkitwesfoodsystemthroughthefishlens