Enhancing food and nutritional security through Gender-Disaggregated Analysis: A case study of Lake Victoria Shore, Tanzania

Raphael N. Jettah (1) , Bonamax Mbasa (2) , Christopher N. Mdoe (3)
(1) Department of Population Studies, Institute of Rural Development Planning- Dodoma, PO Box 138, Dodoma , Tanzania, United Republic of
(2) Department of Rural Development and Regional Planning, Institute of Rural Development Planning-Lake Zone Centre, Mwanza , Tanzania, United Republic of
(3) Institute of Rural Development Planning – Lake Zone Centre, P.O. Box 11957, Mwanza , Tanzania, United Republic of

Abstract

Background: Understanding the extent and the domains under which food and nutrition insecurity is more critical is essential for designing appropriate interventions and targeting strategies. However, it has been very undesirable that access to such information in Lake Victoria Shores has been undeniably very rare.


Aims: This study was conducted in Mara and Simiyu regions along the Lake Victoria shores aiming to investigate the extent of food and nutrition security in the study area, exploring the variation of food and nutritional security across genders of the household head and examining the influence of household income on food and nutrition security.


Material and Methods: A total of 450 households were involved in this survey. Data collection methods were a focus group discussion, household surveys, key informant interviews, and observations.


Results: Results indicated that: Food consumption, food access stability, and nutritional quality in the surveyed areas were substantially unsatisfactory and varied across studied areas; When data are disaggregated by gender, the results indicated that male-headed households were slightly better than female-headed households in nearly all food security aspects, with the difference between two types of households for food consumption and sufficiency aspects being marginally significant (p < 0.10). Furthermore, the finding indicates that household food security improves with household income. The proportion of households with food insufficiency and food instability generally tended to decline significantly with increased household income.


Conclusion: The study, therefore, recommends strengthening horticultural crop production, fish farming, and paddy production and introducing high-value and nutritious food crops like Orange fleshed Sweet Potatoes to increase income, food and nutrition security. Sensitization and emphasis on using various food groups should be carried out to improve food and nutritional diversity.


Keywords: Food and nutrition security, Gender disaggregation, Lake Victoria shore, Household income, Intervention strategies.

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Authors

Raphael N. Jettah
Bonamax Mbasa
Christopher N. Mdoe
christmdoe@gmail.com (Primary Contact)
Author Biographies

Raphael N. Jettah, Department of Population Studies, Institute of Rural Development Planning- Dodoma, PO Box 138, Dodoma

Dr Raphael J. Ndaro is a Lecturer at the Institute of Rural Development Planning-Dodoma. As a Lecturer, his main responsibilities are conducting Training, Research and Consultancy. He has been involved in a number of research and consultancy work, including conducting a Local Content Assessment in Tanzania in 2021, provided by the Prime minister’s office; preparation of the business plan for the project along the SGR corridor in 2021, provided by UNDP; Baseline survey for climate-smart and gender-responsive interventions in five districts in Mara and Simiyu Region in Tanzania.

Bonamax Mbasa, Department of Rural Development and Regional Planning, Institute of Rural Development Planning-Lake Zone Centre, Mwanza

Dr Bonamax Mbasa Nyarusule is a Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Rural Development Planning (IRDP)-Lake Zone Centre, Mwanza; He has been involved in several research and consultancy activities with different research institutions, among which UNDP- Tanzania on Mainstreaming Climate-Smart Approaches and Intervention into Development Initiatives, Decentralization and Local Governance; Financing for Development: Bridging the Financing Gaps Towards Attaining Global and National Priorities. Ministry of Finance and Planning on Preparing Tanzania National Five-Year Development Plan 2021/2022 to 2025/2026.Tanzania Prime Minister Office on Assessment of Tanzania Local Content. Tanzania Investment Centre on Preparation of Tanzania National Investment Guide 2022.

Christopher N. Mdoe, Institute of Rural Development Planning – Lake Zone Centre, P.O. Box 11957, Mwanza

Christopher N. Mdoe is a Lecturer at the Institute of Rural Development Planning – Lake Zone Centre, Mwanza. He is pursuing a PhD in Policy, Planning and Management at the Sokoine University of Agriculture. He is a fully registered Environmental Expert by the National Environmental Management Council of Tanzania (NEMC). He has been involved in several research and consultancy works within the Institution (IRDP) and outside institutions. Among the Organizations, he worked with is UNDP- Tanzania on Mainstreaming Climate-Smart Approaches and Intervention into development initiatives decentralization and local governance.

Jettah, R. N., Mbasa, B., & Mdoe, C. N. (2024). Enhancing food and nutritional security through Gender-Disaggregated Analysis: A case study of Lake Victoria Shore, Tanzania . The North African Journal of Food and Nutrition Research, 8(17), 123–134. https://doi.org/10.51745/najfnr.8.17.123-134

Article Details

Received 2024-02-27
Accepted 2024-04-29
Published 2024-05-13