Alternative food networks and food insecurity in South Africa

The paper argues that there is a certain “stuckness” in food security responses.

Abstract

Food security remains a persistent global challenge. Inequality means that food insecurity is disproportionately experienced. Despite positive shifts in the state of food security at a global scale, recent reports from the Food and Agricultural Organisation suggest that in Africa the total number of undernourished people continues to increase. The paper argues that there is a certain “stuckness” in food security responses. The mutually converging transitions of the urban transition, food regime shifts and the nutrition transition demand different ways of understanding the food system, food security and the components thereof, including value chains.

This work was partly supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the UK Department for International Development.

Citation

Haysom, G., 2016 Alternative food networks and food insecurity in South Africa, Working Paper 33. Cape Town: PLAAS, UWC and Centre of Excellence on Food Security.

Alternative food networks and food insecurity in South Africa

Updates to this page

Published 13 June 2016