小农户家庭粮食和营养安全的包容性业务:对肯尼亚法国豆类农业投资分析的令人不安的结果

J. Wangu, E. Mangnus, A. V. Westen, A. D. Vocht
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引用次数: 4

摘要

包容性商业被认为具有改善全球南方粮食安全状况的潜力。尽管在政府、捐助者和其他发展利益相关者中越来越受欢迎,但人们对这种方法对小农社区的影响知之甚少。因此,上述关于粮食安全状况的包容性商业承诺在很大程度上取决于假设。本文详细分析了肯尼亚Tharaka Nithi县小农为出口市场生产法国豆的案例。该倡议采用的商业模式被称为包容性,旨在加强社区的粮食和营养安全。实证研究结果表明,几个背景因素——特别是土地和水资源的获取——限制了大多数农民在社区中的参与。这导致了显著的排斥程度。此外,当粮食作物取代当地不消费的出口作物时,该公司可能会对当地粮食安全产生负面影响。本文的结果表明,虽然私营部门主导的发展可能有助于提高经济生产力和获得更高质量的粮食,但它很少改变粮食和营养不安全的结构性原因,这通常与获得生产资源有关。我们呼吁在设计和实施包容性商业模式时加强对背景因素的审查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inclusive Business for Smallholders’ Household Food and Nutrition Security: Disconcerting Results from an Analysis of a French Bean Agri-investment in Kenya
Inclusive business is regarded as having the potential to improve food security status in the Global South. Despite increased popularity among governments, donors and other development stakeholders, little is known about the approach’s impact on smallholder farmer communities. As such, the above-mentioned inclusive business promise on food security status largely rests on assumptions. This article scrutinises a case of smallholders’ French bean production for export market in Tharaka Nithi County, Kenya. The business model adopted in the initiative is termed inclusive and is intended to enhance food and nutrition security in the community. The empirical findings show that several contextual factors—in particular, access to land and water resources—limit the participation of the majority of farmers in the community. This leads to a notable level of exclusion. Moreover, the company risks negatively influencing local food security when food crops are substituted for an export crop that is not consumed locally. Results of this article demonstrate that while private sector-led development might contribute to higher economic productivity and access to food of better quality, it rarely changes the structural causes of food and nutrition insecurity, which are oftentimes related to access to production resources. We plead for increased scrutiny of the contextual factors when designing and implementing inclusive business models.
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