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Award details
Urban food systems for healthy diets in South Africa: Addressing the double burden of malnutrition through a coherent systems approach
Reference
BB/T009020/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Corinna Hawkes
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr Jane Battersby
,
Mr Scott Drimie
,
Professor Lisanne du Plessis
,
Dr Mark Spires
Institution
City, University of London
Department
School of Social Sciences
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
498,806
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
14/02/2020
End date
31/03/2022
Duration
25 months
Abstract
unavailable
Summary
In every country in the world, especially poor countries, people experience ill-health because of what they eat. Not eating enough nutritious foods, and eating too many unhealthy foods means young children do not grow properly, women do not get enough vitamins and minerals, and many more people are affected by overweight and diseases like diabetes. This is often called "malnutrition" and is especially serious for young children, including babies, many of whom are not properly breastfed or receive inadequate nutrients when they are under the age of five. One country with a major malnutrition problem is South Africa. Most people in South Africa live in cities, where life is difficult for poor people. These people have long travel times to work and live in tiny houses. This makes it really difficult for them to store and prepare nutritious foods at home. As a result, they often rely on food that they can eat straight away or does not spoil, like fatty fried food and sugary snacks and drinks. Because they have so little money and time, they often feed babies watery, starchy foods without enough nutrients. Where they live and work, this food is readily available and cheap. In fact, the whole system of things that bring food into their neighbourhoods makes it easier and cheaper to create an environment around them that's full of the wrong types of food. This system is known as a "food system." This all means, too, that the many efforts the government has made in South Africa to help people eat better have not really reached their potential, efforts such as the extra money they give to poor families for their children, or programmes designed to help them feed their toddlers better. While South Africa has its own specific context, this is also the case in many other countries around the world. In our project, we want to change this. We want to see a whole system of actions that will actually work for people who live in cities. This means ensuring that existing actions tohelp them are better aligned with and supported by that food system, as well as designing new actions within the system that recognise the challenges in peoples' lives. We are going to provide evidence to know what this system of actions would look like. We will do this in a way that is not done very much: to actually start by listening to the people in urban settings who experience the problems we are talking about. We will talk to families who have children under the age of 5, as this is the group the evidence says needs most support, along with their mothers and other women who might have babies quite soon. We will walk with them around their neighbourhoods and find out what influences the foods they eat, and what could change that. We will talk to them about the ways the government already tries to help them and whether they know about them, or are able to respond to them. And together with them, we will design a system of actions that would actually work for them and their children. We will also talk to the government about what they can do, especially about changes further back into the entire food system, as well as in urban planning. And we will bring into a broader conversation all the people who have influenced what these people eat. Together we will work to design a system that supports children and their mothers eating foods that support their health and development. We will do this in two communities in the fourth largest province in South Africa: the Western Cape. We have chosen that place because the local government is already committed to improving food systems to address poor nutrition in their communities, and have asked us to help them identify what could effect real change. Although we will conduct this study in South Africa, it will be relevant to the region and the whole world. So we will produce reports and other materials that help other people in other cities create a more effective response to poor diets in their communities.
Impact Summary
The long-term vision of this study is to contribute to a reduction in the double burden of malnutrition in urban settings in the Western Cape, South Africa by improving the quality of diets among women and children under 5. The realization of this vision is beyond the timeframe of the proposed work, so we seek to establish the conditions under which this vision can be met. We seek to do so by increasing knowledge and shared understanding; enhancing agency and accountability; and accelerating implementation of effective action. We seek to benefit five groups of beneficiaries, four of whom (1-4) are directly involved in the study: (1) Women and children under the age of 5 at risk of malnutrition in urban areas of the Western Cape. They will benefit by eating more nutritious diets and having greater capability to respond to interventions designed to address the double burden of malnutrition. (2) The Government of the Western Cape. The study has been designed to inform and make recommendations to aid the provincial government in delivering its Nourish to Flourish food systems strategy to improve nutrition and food security. (3) Stakeholders in the systems relevant to the double burden of malnutrition in the Western Cape and beyond. The study will include the creation of 100-Day Action plans for all stakeholders to initiate the delivery of a systems approach and create shared accountability. (4) UNICEF and its regional and country programme offices. UNICEF will be involved in dissemination of communications outputs and benefit from a better understanding of how to take forward its new Food Systems for Children programme, especially in urban settings. (5) The Government of South Africa and other DAC countries in the region and around the world, and the low-income urban populations at risk of the double burden of malnutrition whom they serve. We will produce communications outputs to increase knowledge and understanding of a systems approach nationally, regionally and internationally. The pathways to this impact would be by: (i) Involving ultimate beneficiaries in to research as part of the co-creation of knowledge. Women with children under the age of 5 will actively participate in knowledge generation through community-based participatory research methods. This process of activating citizenship is known to be a crucial capacity development strategy to increase impact for community members. (ii) Involving the government of the Western Cape in the design of the study and throughout the proposed work. The Department of the Premier has participated in the design of this proposal, expressed commitment to the project and is anticipating it will provide recommendations and guidance which they can implement. We will work together throughout the project as part of the research team, feeding back through Steering Committee meetings and informal discussions whenever necessary. (iii) Involving the ultimate beneficiaries, government partners and food system and other relevant stakeholders in a process of co-production. The process of co-producing what a systems approach would look like will enable all beneficiaries to come to collective agreement of the transformative actions needed, and to generate shared accountability for initiating action. (iv) Carefully crafting communications outputs and a dissemination strategy to reach beneficiaries at a provincial level and nationally and internationally. Different outputs will be crafted to target different beneficiaries, and disseminated at influencing opportunities. These impact activities will take place throughout the study with a budget of approximately £60,000.
Committee
Not funded via Committee
Research Topics
X – not assigned to a current Research Topic
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
GCRF Malnutrition [2019]
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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