Food security score for Kenya

Article 43, Section (1)(c) of the Bill of Rights of the Kenya Constitution (2010) states that: “Every person has the right to be free from hunger, and to have adequate food of acceptable quality. To monitor progress and targeting interventions towards realization of this goal, an easyto-use, but sci...

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Autores principales: Wakibi, Samwel, Gichuhi, Wanjiru, Kabira, Wanjiku Mukabi
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: African Women Studies Centre 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172567
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author Wakibi, Samwel
Gichuhi, Wanjiru
Kabira, Wanjiku Mukabi
author_browse Gichuhi, Wanjiru
Kabira, Wanjiku Mukabi
Wakibi, Samwel
author_facet Wakibi, Samwel
Gichuhi, Wanjiru
Kabira, Wanjiku Mukabi
author_sort Wakibi, Samwel
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Article 43, Section (1)(c) of the Bill of Rights of the Kenya Constitution (2010) states that: “Every person has the right to be free from hunger, and to have adequate food of acceptable quality. To monitor progress and targeting interventions towards realization of this goal, an easyto-use, but scientifically sound measure of food security is required.” The objective of this paper is to construct such measure that will subsequently constitute a Food Security Score (henceforth, FSS) for Kenya. This Food Security Score will enable the classification of the food security status of each county in the country. This FSS study was nested within a crosssectional baseline study conducted by the African Women’s Studies Centre (AWSC). The study had a representative sample of 4,129 households drawn from 20 randomly selected counties within six of Kenya’s Agro-ecological zones. The food security score study consulted one adult respondent in each household on the experiences, practices and behaviours of household members that have a bearing on food insecurity, including concerns such as: (a) not having enough food to feed the entire household; (b) cutting back on meal rations because of insufficient amounts of food stuffs; (c) lack of resources to buy food, and (d) going to bed hungry because of an absence of food to feed the household. Out of the 4129 households surveyed, 4060 responded to all four key questions selected to compute the FSS for Kenya. The results of the study revealed that whereas 67 percent of Kenyan households are food secure, 30 percent are food insecure, meaning that they lack access to enough food to sustain an active, healthy life for all members of their households. From the category of the food insecure group, a total of 9 percent are chronically food insecure. Based on this FSS, food security varied significantly amongst various counties and agro ecological zones. Agro-ecological zone (p-value<0.001) and county (p-value<0.001) are significantly associated with food security. Counties with higher rates of food insecurity than the nationally defined levels are mainly found in the coastal lowlands, inland lowlands and upper midlands agro-ecological zones. In line with the Constitution of Kenya (2010), efforts towards achieving food security need to focus on ensuring that all Kenyans are food secure. Although the two variables relating to the specific agro-ecological zones and counties significantly impact on food security in Kenya, these are not amenable to interventions. Hence, they can be used to target the most vulnerable regions and monitor improvements after implementing appropriate interventions to ameliorate food security. However, further research is recommended to validate the FSS regionally and internationally in order to improve its universality of interpretation.
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spelling CGSpace1725672025-04-28T06:59:36Z Food security score for Kenya Wakibi, Samwel Gichuhi, Wanjiru Kabira, Wanjiku Mukabi food security agroecology households statistics Article 43, Section (1)(c) of the Bill of Rights of the Kenya Constitution (2010) states that: “Every person has the right to be free from hunger, and to have adequate food of acceptable quality. To monitor progress and targeting interventions towards realization of this goal, an easyto-use, but scientifically sound measure of food security is required.” The objective of this paper is to construct such measure that will subsequently constitute a Food Security Score (henceforth, FSS) for Kenya. This Food Security Score will enable the classification of the food security status of each county in the country. This FSS study was nested within a crosssectional baseline study conducted by the African Women’s Studies Centre (AWSC). The study had a representative sample of 4,129 households drawn from 20 randomly selected counties within six of Kenya’s Agro-ecological zones. The food security score study consulted one adult respondent in each household on the experiences, practices and behaviours of household members that have a bearing on food insecurity, including concerns such as: (a) not having enough food to feed the entire household; (b) cutting back on meal rations because of insufficient amounts of food stuffs; (c) lack of resources to buy food, and (d) going to bed hungry because of an absence of food to feed the household. Out of the 4129 households surveyed, 4060 responded to all four key questions selected to compute the FSS for Kenya. The results of the study revealed that whereas 67 percent of Kenyan households are food secure, 30 percent are food insecure, meaning that they lack access to enough food to sustain an active, healthy life for all members of their households. From the category of the food insecure group, a total of 9 percent are chronically food insecure. Based on this FSS, food security varied significantly amongst various counties and agro ecological zones. Agro-ecological zone (p-value<0.001) and county (p-value<0.001) are significantly associated with food security. Counties with higher rates of food insecurity than the nationally defined levels are mainly found in the coastal lowlands, inland lowlands and upper midlands agro-ecological zones. In line with the Constitution of Kenya (2010), efforts towards achieving food security need to focus on ensuring that all Kenyans are food secure. Although the two variables relating to the specific agro-ecological zones and counties significantly impact on food security in Kenya, these are not amenable to interventions. Hence, they can be used to target the most vulnerable regions and monitor improvements after implementing appropriate interventions to ameliorate food security. However, further research is recommended to validate the FSS regionally and internationally in order to improve its universality of interpretation. 2024 2025-01-30T18:08:41Z 2025-01-30T18:08:41Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172567 en Open Access application/pdf African Women Studies Centre Wakibi, S., Gichuhi, W., & Kabira, W.M. (2024). Food security score for Kenya. Pathways to African Feminism and Development: Journal of the African Women Studies Centre. 1(2). https://uonjournals.uonbi.ac.ke/ojs/index.php/aws/article/view/1956
spellingShingle food security
agroecology
households
statistics
Wakibi, Samwel
Gichuhi, Wanjiru
Kabira, Wanjiku Mukabi
Food security score for Kenya
title Food security score for Kenya
title_full Food security score for Kenya
title_fullStr Food security score for Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Food security score for Kenya
title_short Food security score for Kenya
title_sort food security score for kenya
topic food security
agroecology
households
statistics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172567
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AT gichuhiwanjiru foodsecurityscoreforkenya
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