Food Sources and Access Strategies in Ugandan Secondary Cities: An Intersectional Analysis
2019 (English)In: Environment & Urbanization, ISSN 0956-2478, E-ISSN 1746-0301, Vol. 31, no 2, p. 375-396Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
This article arises from an interest in African urbanization and in the food, farming and nutritional transitions that some scholars present as integral to urban life. The paper investigates personal urban food environments, food sources and access strategies in two secondary Ugandan cities, Mbale and Mbarara, drawing on in-depth interviews and applying an intersectional lens. Food sources were similar across dimensions of difference but food access strategies varied. My findings indicate that socioeconomic circumstance (class) was the most salient influence shaping differences in daily food access strategies. Socioeconomic status, in turn, interacted with other identity aspects, an individual’s asset base and broader structural inequalities in influencing urban food environments. Rural land and rural connections, or multispatiality, were also important for food-secure urban lives. The work illuminates geometries of advantage and disadvantage within secondary cities, and highlights similarities and differences between food environments in these cities and Uganda’s capital, Kampala.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2019. Vol. 31, no 2, p. 375-396
Keywords [en]
Uganda, secondary cities, food environments, non-communicable disease, nutrition transition, obesity, intersectionality, feminist geography, Social and Economic Geography, Social och ekonomisk geografi, Human Geography, Kulturgeografi, Nutrition and Dietetics, Näringslära, Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology, Folkhälsovetenskap, global hälsa, socialmedicin och epidemiologi
National Category
Human Geography
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:miun:diva-39111DOI: 10.1177/0956247819847346OAI: oai:DiVA.org:miun-39111DiVA, id: diva2:1435166
2020-06-042020-06-042020-06-10Bibliographically approved