Food Security in Southern Africa

Food Security in Southern Africa
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 130
Release: 2003
Genre: Africa, Southern
ISBN:

The severe food shortages and hunger that have recently struck countries in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region, particularly in Malawi, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Lesotho, Swaziland and Mozambique, have been described by the World Food Programme as the 'worst food crisis in a decade'. The region has suffered from a lethal mix of food shortages, lack of access to basic social services and an alarmingly high prevalence of HIV/AIDS all contributing to the growing numbers of vulnerable people in rural and urban Southern Africa. According to several reports from missions undertaken in the SADC region in 2002 by the World Food Programme and the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, fourteen million people were living on the brink of starvation and faced serious shortages until the region's main harvest in April 2003.

Inducing Food Insecurity

Inducing Food Insecurity
Author: Margaret A. Mohamed-Salih
Publisher: Nordic Africa Institute
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1994
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9789171063595

Agro-ecosystems, by Eric C. Quaye

Food Security in South Africa

Food Security in South Africa
Author: Sakiko Fukuda-Parr
Publisher: Juta and Company (Pty) Ltd
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2015-11-10
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1775820726

The right to food is guaranteed in South Africa’s Constitution as it is in international law. Yet food insecurity remains widespread and persistent, at levels much higher than in countries with similar levels of per capita GDP and development, such as Brazil. In this book, leading local and international researchers on food security and related policy work have come together to create the first systematic and trans-disciplinary analysis of food security and its multiple dimensions in South Africa and the southern African region. Drawing on Amartya Sen’s entitlement theory to identify the key drivers of hunger, they see food insecurity as a chronic, structurally based condition rather than only resulting from natural environmental disasters, temporary economic shocks and household vulnerabilities. The authors focus on a range of policy options and choices to provide short-term and longer-term solutions to the systemic causes of unemployment, failing rural livelihoods and traditional subsistence production. They also emphasise the linkages between the social and economic dimensions of food insecurity and use an integrative, interdisciplinary approach to analyse the reasons why these conditions persist and what can be done to address them. Importantly the book brings together work undertaken at local and national levels in new ways so that policy-makers, researchers, human rights advocates and social and economic scholars are better able to make the links between macro- and micro-processes of development.

Regional Integration for Food Security in Southern Africa

Regional Integration for Food Security in Southern Africa
Author: Siphamandla Zondi
Publisher:
Total Pages: 58
Release: 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

The food crisis in Southern Africa is compounded by socio-economic, health and environmental problems. There is a diminishing income-generating labour supply and a low food production rate in areas which may be beset by drought, famine, HIV/AIDS or conflict. That agriculture is a viable sector for economic growth is posited on the fact that this sector provides a livelihood for some 70% of the region's population. Nevertheless the continent has failed to produce enough food for consumption. The acceleration of the process of globalisation has exacerbated the difficult and imbalanced agricultural environment, in which poor countries must operate, which, so this volume maintains, can only be addressed through integrated approaches at a regional level. Furthermore, the failure of so many international food relief programmes indicates that an approach harnessed by the regional bodies such as Nepad and SADC may be the most effective strategy to ensure the prospect of food security.