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Hidden hunger in rural Tanzania: what can qualitative research tell us about what to do about chronic food insecurity?

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dc.creator Shepherd, Andrew
dc.creator Kayunze, Kim
dc.creator Vendelin, Simon
dc.creator Darko, Emily
dc.creator Evans, Alice
dc.date 2022-10-17T06:40:12Z
dc.date 2022-10-17T06:40:12Z
dc.date 2011
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:53:31Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:53:31Z
dc.identifier http://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/4671
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/93826
dc.description Working Paper
dc.description This paper is part of a series of working papers making use of a qualitative, life history dataset developed by the CPRC in Tanzania. It investigates the experience of hunger, its causes and consequences, the strategies people use to prevent it, and derives a set of policy implications. The most food insecure people depend on wage labour, so controlling food price inflation and improving wages and working conditions for poor casual labourers would be one priority. Buffers against hunger can easily erode for vulnerable older people, separated, divorced or widowed women, and such people need to be protected against the possible loss of their assets or access to resources. Knowledge is also a powerful tool against hunger – people at local level could use more and better information about nutrition, suggesting that a revival of the once successful community nutrition programme would help.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.subject Tanzania
dc.subject Hunger
dc.subject Insecurity
dc.subject Vulnerability
dc.title Hidden hunger in rural Tanzania: what can qualitative research tell us about what to do about chronic food insecurity?
dc.type Working Paper


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