“Living from Day to Day”: Food Insecurity, Complexity, and Coping in Mutare, Zimbabwe
2012; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 51; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/03670244.2012.661328
ISSN1543-5237
AutoresPauline Gwatirisa, Lenore Manderson,
Tópico(s)Agriculture, Land Use, Rural Development
ResumoIn Zimbabwe, unpredictable conditions associated with structural and institutional factors exacerbated the combined effects of structural violence, economic and political instability, and climate change in the mid 2000s, contributing to widespread food insecurity. Drought, food shortages, and government settlement policy affecting both rural and urban populations has yielded a national human rights crisis. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in Mutare, southeast Zimbabwe, in 2005-2006, the authors illustrate the flow-on effects of drought and government policy on the livelihoods of households already suffering as a result of the social impacts of AIDS, and how people in a regional city responded to these factors, defining and meeting their basic food needs in diverse ways.
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