Agriculture and Nutrition in Pakistan - Pathways and Disconnects: Research Brief

This brief summaries an evidence review on this topic

Abstract

Results of the latest nationwide nutrition survey show that Pakistan has persistently high rates of undernutrition despite respectable rates of economic growth. Amongst economic sectors, agriculture could have positive impacts on nutrition outcomes, but only through nuanced approaches. Exploring possible links between agricultural growth and nutrition improvement in the country reveals that land, gender relations, individual behaviour and preferences, as well as political priorities and organisational effectiveness, act as disconnects between agriculture and nutrition. These areas represent both opportunities and challenges for improving nutrition outcomes. This has important implications for existing policy and programmes that address issues such as labour arrangements, women’s agency, social protection and citizenship.

This summary is based on the evidence review ‘Agriculture and Nutrition in Pakistan – Pathways and Disconnects’ written by Mysbah Balagamwalah and Haris Gazdar (CSSR) for LANSA.

This research was supported by the Leveraging Agriculture for Nutrition in South Asia (LANSA) programme

Citation

Zuberi, S. Agriculture and Nutrition in Pakistan - Pathways and Disconnects: Research Brief. Collective for Social Science Research, Karachi, Pakistan (2014) 4 pp. [LANSA Research Brief 01]

Agriculture and Nutrition in Pakistan - Pathways and Disconnects: Research Brief

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2014