Ahmed Abubakari, Lazo Denise P Lozano, Alatinga Kennedy A, Gasparatos Alexandros
Department of Planning, Faculty of Planning and Land Management, SD Dombo University of Business and Integrated Development Studies, Wa, Ghana.
Graduate Program in Sustainability Science, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Sustain Sci. 2022 Aug 16:1-25. doi: 10.1007/s11625-022-01195-y.
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is urbanising rapidly. One of the most visible outcomes of this urbanisation process is the change in the diets of urban residents. However, diet change in the context of rapid urbanisation is a complex and multi-dimensional phenomenon that encompasses multiple intersecting historical, environmental, socioeconomic, and political aspects. This study aims to unravel and systematise the characteristics, drivers and impacts of diet changes in Accra, through the interviews of multiple stakeholders and Causal Loop Diagrams. Diet change is characterised by the increased consumption of certain foodstuff such as rice, chicken, fish, vegetable oil, sugar, and ultra-processed food (UPF), and the decreased consumption of traditional foodstuff such as roots, tubers, and some cereals such as millet. These changes are driven by multiple factors, including among others, changes in income, sociocultural practices, energy access, and policy and trade regimes, as well as the proliferation of supermarkets and food vendors. Collectively, these diet changes have a series of environmental, socioeconomic, and health/nutrition-related impacts. Our results highlight the need to understand in a comprehensive manner the complex processes shaping diet change in the context of urbanisation, as a means of identifying effective interventions to promote healthy and sustainable urban diets in SSA. The development of such intervention should embrace a multi-stakeholder perspective, considering that the relevant urban actors have radically different perspectives and interests at this interface of urbanisation and diet change.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11625-022-01195-y.
撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)正在迅速城市化。这一城市化进程最明显的结果之一是城市居民饮食的变化。然而,在快速城市化背景下的饮食变化是一个复杂且多维度的现象,涵盖了多个相互交织的历史、环境、社会经济和政治方面。本研究旨在通过对多个利益相关者的访谈和因果循环图,揭示并系统化阿克拉饮食变化的特征、驱动因素和影响。饮食变化的特点是某些食品的消费量增加,如大米、鸡肉、鱼类、植物油、糖和超加工食品(UPF),而传统食品的消费量减少,如根茎类、块茎类以及一些谷物,如小米。这些变化由多种因素驱动,包括收入变化、社会文化习俗、能源获取、政策和贸易制度,以及超市和食品摊贩的激增。总体而言,这些饮食变化产生了一系列环境、社会经济以及与健康/营养相关的影响。我们的研究结果强调,有必要全面理解城市化背景下塑造饮食变化的复杂过程,以此作为确定有效干预措施以促进撒哈拉以南非洲健康和可持续城市饮食的一种手段。这种干预措施的制定应采用多利益相关者的视角,因为相关城市行为体在城市化与饮食变化的这一交汇点上有着截然不同的观点和利益。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s11625 - 022 - 01195 - y获取的补充材料。