Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria

The way people access food in Nigeria is of central relevance for food security, health and sustainability. One key trend is the shift from household-based to primarily out-of-home food consumption as an increasing majority of the urban poor derive their daily nutrient intake from street foods. Howe...

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Autores principales: Adeosun, Kehinde Paul, Greene, Mary, Oosterveer, Peter
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126454
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author Adeosun, Kehinde Paul
Greene, Mary
Oosterveer, Peter
author_browse Adeosun, Kehinde Paul
Greene, Mary
Oosterveer, Peter
author_facet Adeosun, Kehinde Paul
Greene, Mary
Oosterveer, Peter
author_sort Adeosun, Kehinde Paul
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The way people access food in Nigeria is of central relevance for food security, health and sustainability. One key trend is the shift from household-based to primarily out-of-home food consumption as an increasing majority of the urban poor derive their daily nutrient intake from street foods. However, few studies have yet explored the role of the ready-to-eat food vending sector in urban food systems and the diets of the urban poor. This paper investigates the interrelations between these practices and the diversity of food groups provisioned among the urban poor in developing city contexts. A social practice approach is employed to explore differentiation among informal-ready-to-eat food vending practices in the city of Ibadan, Nigeria, in terms of their daily activities, competences and resources. Applied methods include GIS mapping, food log diaries, in-depth interviews and participant observation to map and classify informal-ready-to-eat food vending practices according to the nature of food provisioned and explore the everyday performances of different informal-ready-to-eat food vending practice initiatives and their relation to dietary diversity. The results reveal three key categories among these practices: traditional, processed and unprocessed—with varying levels of diversity in the food groups on offer. Traditional food vendors offer more diversified food compared to processed food vendors and unprocessed food vendors. The results reveal that material infrastructure, cooking bargaining and purchasing skills and nutritional knowledge are key to the diversity of food groups provisioned. The paper concludes by considering the wider relevance of these findings for urban food science and policy.
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spelling CGSpace1264542024-11-07T09:55:57Z Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria Adeosun, Kehinde Paul Greene, Mary Oosterveer, Peter food security health sustainability households urban poor nutrient intake food supply urban areas geographical information systems foods The way people access food in Nigeria is of central relevance for food security, health and sustainability. One key trend is the shift from household-based to primarily out-of-home food consumption as an increasing majority of the urban poor derive their daily nutrient intake from street foods. However, few studies have yet explored the role of the ready-to-eat food vending sector in urban food systems and the diets of the urban poor. This paper investigates the interrelations between these practices and the diversity of food groups provisioned among the urban poor in developing city contexts. A social practice approach is employed to explore differentiation among informal-ready-to-eat food vending practices in the city of Ibadan, Nigeria, in terms of their daily activities, competences and resources. Applied methods include GIS mapping, food log diaries, in-depth interviews and participant observation to map and classify informal-ready-to-eat food vending practices according to the nature of food provisioned and explore the everyday performances of different informal-ready-to-eat food vending practice initiatives and their relation to dietary diversity. The results reveal three key categories among these practices: traditional, processed and unprocessed—with varying levels of diversity in the food groups on offer. Traditional food vendors offer more diversified food compared to processed food vendors and unprocessed food vendors. The results reveal that material infrastructure, cooking bargaining and purchasing skills and nutritional knowledge are key to the diversity of food groups provisioned. The paper concludes by considering the wider relevance of these findings for urban food science and policy. 2022-06 2023-01-01T16:19:20Z 2023-01-01T16:19:20Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126454 en Open Access Springer Adeosun, Kehinde Paul; Greene, Mary and Oosterveer, Peter. 2022. Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria. Food Security 14: 763-780. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-022-01257-0
spellingShingle food security
health
sustainability
households
urban poor
nutrient intake
food supply
urban areas
geographical information systems
foods
Adeosun, Kehinde Paul
Greene, Mary
Oosterveer, Peter
Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria
title Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria
title_full Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria
title_fullStr Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria
title_short Informal ready-to-eat food vending: A social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in Nigeria
title_sort informal ready to eat food vending a social practice perspective on urban food provisioning in nigeria
topic food security
health
sustainability
households
urban poor
nutrient intake
food supply
urban areas
geographical information systems
foods
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126454
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AT greenemary informalreadytoeatfoodvendingasocialpracticeperspectiveonurbanfoodprovisioninginnigeria
AT oosterveerpeter informalreadytoeatfoodvendingasocialpracticeperspectiveonurbanfoodprovisioninginnigeria