Africa’s high level of food insecurity is exacerbated by rapid urbanisation, leading to the diversion of resources from food production in rural areas. Despite this, food insecurity policies continue to disproportionately focus on rural dwellers due to persistently high levels of rural poverty. We examine the association between housing type and urban food insecurity using the 2017 South Africa General Household Survey. Using the Household Food Security Access Scale and a dietary diversity indicator, we find that like other forms of deprivation in South Africa, food insecurity has significant racial and gender dimensions. Dwelling type is vital in influencing the food insecurity of households using both measures. Persons living in informal homes are more likely to experience food insecurity than those in semi-formal and formal dwellings. There is a need to create a synergy between new and already existing programmes so that they are appropriately leveraged.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/19463138.2019.1666852
Former CoE-FS-funded student, Charity Pote, co-authors the chapter, “Food insecurity and hunger: The experiences of child-headed households in a selected community in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa”, in the Relational Child & Youth Care Practice (34:4).
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