'We are not eating our own food here': Food security and the cash economy in eastern Uganda

被引:11
|
作者
Whyte, MA
Kyaddondo, D
机构
[1] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Anthropol, DK-1353 Copenhagen K, Denmark
[2] Makerere Univ, Kampala, Uganda
关键词
agricultural change; food security; development; cash cropping; gender; rice; irrigation; Uganda;
D O I
10.1002/ldr.723
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
In this paper we explore changes in agriculture and provisioning in Bunyole County, located in Tororo District on Uganda's eastern border. Since the 1980s parts of the region have experienced a 'rice boom' based on the cultivation of paddy rice in irrigated schemes and seasonal swamps. During the same period, the cultivation of cotton, the traditional cash crop, has declined precipitously. Many households in the region are no longer self-sufficient in food, and food security is a common concern. Drawing both on anthropological field studies in contrasting parts of Bunyole County (1992-3 and 2001-2), as well as long-term field research in Bunyole that started in 1969, we examine changes in farming systems and land use, in the gender-based division of tabour in family production, and in the interdependence of families and individuals as expressed in social exchange. We trace the increasing importance of trade in food crops of all sorts and in particular the significance for the local rice economy of an emerging year-round market for agricultural tabour. Finally we examine the developing and changing discourse about 'food'-as a commercial, a nutritional and a symbolic commodity-and the corresponding discourse about 'money'. We see food security-at household level and in regions-as an outcome of the strategic actions of individuals. However, we also argue that local debates about food security reflect a changing relationship between 'food' and 'money'-a change that involves both social and productive relationships. In eastern Bunyole these changes are expressed in terms of the new rice economy but, we suggest, the changes are more fundamental, and can be seen in many parts of Uganda. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:173 / 182
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Spending our water and soils for food security
    Busscher, W.
    JOURNAL OF SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION, 2012, 67 (03) : 228 - 234
  • [42] Gender and food security in a fair, green economy
    Smith K.
    Development, 2012, 55 (1) : 81 - 89
  • [43] Protecting food security for the poor in a liberalizing economy
    AbdelLatif, A
    ElLaithy, H
    EGYPT'S AGRICULTURE IN A REFORM ERA, 1996, : 294 - 327
  • [44] Eating inequity: The injustice that brings us our food
    Alattar, Manar Arica
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE FOOD SYSTEMS AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 10 (03) : 17 - 30
  • [45] CASH TRANSFERS AND FOOD SECURITY IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
    Burchi, Francesco
    D'Agostino, Giorgio
    Pieroni, Luca
    Scarlato, Margherita
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2018, 86 (04) : 383 - 400
  • [46] The impact of the Social Cash Transfer Scheme on food security in Malawi
    Miller, Candace M.
    Tsoka, Maxton
    Reichert, Kathryn
    FOOD POLICY, 2011, 36 (02) : 230 - 238
  • [47] The effect of cash transfers and household vulnerability on food security in Zimbabwe
    Bhalla, Garima
    Handa, Sudhanshu
    Angeles, Gustavo
    Seidenfeld, David
    FOOD POLICY, 2018, 74 : 82 - 99
  • [48] GLOBALIZATION AND FOOD SECURITY IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
    Pokrivcak, Jan
    Bielekova, Eva
    Cupak, Andrej
    GLOBALIZATION AND ITS SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES, 2018, : 1291 - 1299
  • [49] SUGGESTS WE EAT OUR SURPLUS FOOD
    MAXCY, RB
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 1954, 37 (03) : 344 - 344
  • [50] Role of women in the household economy, food production and food security -: Policy guidelines
    Kotzé, DA
    OUTLOOK ON AGRICULTURE, 2003, 32 (02) : 111 - 121