Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns (people confined to home, with movement restrictions) presented an external shock to livelihoods and food systems worldwide, most severely affecting vulnerable households in low-income countries. While evidence is available regarding how COVID-19 general...

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Autores principales: Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando, Lundy, Mark, Borgemeister, Christian, Ramirez-Villegas, Julian, Beuchelt, Tina
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140714
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author Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando
Lundy, Mark
Borgemeister, Christian
Ramirez-Villegas, Julian
Beuchelt, Tina
author_browse Beuchelt, Tina
Borgemeister, Christian
Lundy, Mark
Ramirez-Villegas, Julian
Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando
author_facet Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando
Lundy, Mark
Borgemeister, Christian
Ramirez-Villegas, Julian
Beuchelt, Tina
author_sort Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns (people confined to home, with movement restrictions) presented an external shock to livelihoods and food systems worldwide, most severely affecting vulnerable households in low-income countries. While evidence is available regarding how COVID-19 generally affected low-income countries, the specific dynamics of local food-system responses and sustainably-certified coffee farm households has not been examined, despite them being usually deemed to be more resilient to shocks. This research examines how local food systems in Honduras changed during lockdowns, how certified coffee households coped with the shock, especially food insecurity, and the potential role of coffee cooperatives in increasing households’ resilience under future shocks and stressors. Methods: We applied a mixed-methods approach that combined a structured household survey with semi-structured qualitative interviews with 91 households, 6 cooperative representatives, and 18 food-system representatives. Results: We found that coffee-income-dependent households experienced greater food insecurity during lockdown than coffee households with diversified incomes. Before lockdown the local food system was highly dependent on external fresh food from outside the state. Food suppliers changed altered fresh-food procurement strategies, mostly to maintain fresh-food availability at the beginning of the pandemic. However, more than half the interviewed households lacked confidence regarding food security, amid rising food prices and local shortages. Certified coffee cooperatives supported their members by providing food assistance, cash transfers, and credit. Discussion: Some of these strategies are difficult to maintain where crises are recurrent and that may render households more vulnerable to future extreme events. Rather, coffee cooperatives could diversify and support their members in growing and marketing additional food crops. This could be a key approach for boosting local food security and strengthening the local food system.
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spelling CGSpace1407142025-12-08T10:29:22Z Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19 Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando Lundy, Mark Borgemeister, Christian Ramirez-Villegas, Julian Beuchelt, Tina farmers food systems food security seguridad alimentaria resilience households pequeños agricultores-campesinos sistema alimentario resiliencia-resiliencia frente a impactos y crisis Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns (people confined to home, with movement restrictions) presented an external shock to livelihoods and food systems worldwide, most severely affecting vulnerable households in low-income countries. While evidence is available regarding how COVID-19 generally affected low-income countries, the specific dynamics of local food-system responses and sustainably-certified coffee farm households has not been examined, despite them being usually deemed to be more resilient to shocks. This research examines how local food systems in Honduras changed during lockdowns, how certified coffee households coped with the shock, especially food insecurity, and the potential role of coffee cooperatives in increasing households’ resilience under future shocks and stressors. Methods: We applied a mixed-methods approach that combined a structured household survey with semi-structured qualitative interviews with 91 households, 6 cooperative representatives, and 18 food-system representatives. Results: We found that coffee-income-dependent households experienced greater food insecurity during lockdown than coffee households with diversified incomes. Before lockdown the local food system was highly dependent on external fresh food from outside the state. Food suppliers changed altered fresh-food procurement strategies, mostly to maintain fresh-food availability at the beginning of the pandemic. However, more than half the interviewed households lacked confidence regarding food security, amid rising food prices and local shortages. Certified coffee cooperatives supported their members by providing food assistance, cash transfers, and credit. Discussion: Some of these strategies are difficult to maintain where crises are recurrent and that may render households more vulnerable to future extreme events. Rather, coffee cooperatives could diversify and support their members in growing and marketing additional food crops. This could be a key approach for boosting local food security and strengthening the local food system. 2024-03-19 2024-04-02T10:20:28Z 2024-04-02T10:20:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140714 en Open Access application/pdf Frontiers Media Rodriguez-Camayo, F.; Lundy, M.; Borgemeister, C.; Ramirez-Villegas, J.; Beuchelt, T. (2024) Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems 8:1304484. ISSN: 2571-581X
spellingShingle farmers
food systems
food security
seguridad alimentaria
resilience
households
pequeños agricultores-campesinos
sistema alimentario
resiliencia-resiliencia frente a impactos y crisis
Rodriguez-Camayo, Fernando
Lundy, Mark
Borgemeister, Christian
Ramirez-Villegas, Julian
Beuchelt, Tina
Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19
title Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19
title_full Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19
title_fullStr Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19
title_short Local food system and household responses to external shocks: The case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in Western Honduras during COVID-19
title_sort local food system and household responses to external shocks the case of sustainable coffee farmers and their cooperatives in western honduras during covid 19
topic farmers
food systems
food security
seguridad alimentaria
resilience
households
pequeños agricultores-campesinos
sistema alimentario
resiliencia-resiliencia frente a impactos y crisis
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140714
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