Independent Researcher and Translator, South Africa.
SOAS University of London, United Kingdom.
Disasters. 2025 Jan;49(1):e12667. doi: 10.1111/disa.12667. Epub 2024 Nov 7.
Food insecurity in South Africa was critical prior to the COVID-19 outbreak, but the problem deepened quickly during the pandemic when government controls caused job losses, a food supply collapse, and escalating hunger. The food and fuel price hikes and political instability that followed led to the July 2021 'unrest', which left more than 350 people dead. Behind this lay a crisis within the governing African National Congress. In this paper, we draw on in-depth interviews and ethnography with individuals working in food-based livelihoods to investigate how people continued to secure food, and how rural food systems were affected. Against a backdrop of hunger, social unrest, and xenophobic hostility, we consider how people perceive the state in a rural area of KwaZulu-Natal. We argue that weak governing institutions and South Africa's exposure to globally-triggered spikes in food and fuel prices are leading to food insecurity. Hunger, in turn, is contributing to a crisis of legitimation for the state.
南非的粮食不安全问题在 COVID-19 爆发之前就已经很严重,但在疫情期间,由于政府的管控导致失业、食品供应崩溃和饥饿加剧,这个问题迅速恶化。随后的食品和燃料价格上涨以及政治不稳定导致了 2021 年 7 月的“动乱”,造成 350 多人死亡。这背后是执政的非洲人国民大会内部的一场危机。在本文中,我们通过对从事基于食品的生计的个人进行深入的访谈和民族志研究,调查了人们如何继续获得食物,以及农村粮食系统受到了怎样的影响。在饥饿、社会动荡和仇外敌对的背景下,我们考虑了人们如何在夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省的一个农村地区看待国家。我们认为,薄弱的治理机构和南非对全球引发的粮食和燃料价格飙升的敞口,正在导致粮食不安全。饥饿反过来又导致国家的合法性危机。