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Food security status: its drivers and coping strategies among vegetable farming households

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dc.contributor.author Mukaila, Ridwan
dc.contributor.author Falola, Abraham
dc.contributor.author Omotesho, Olubunmi Abayomi
dc.date.accessioned 2021-03-05T12:39:12Z
dc.date.available 2021-03-05T12:39:12Z
dc.date.issued 2021-01-29
dc.identifier.citation Mukaila, Ridwan, Abraham Falola, Olubunmi Abayomi Omotesho. 2020. ”Food security status: its drivers and coping strategies among vegetable farming households”. Cercetări Agronomice în Moldova 53 (4): 414-425. DOI: 10.46909/cerce-2020-035. en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.iuls.ro/xmlui/handle/20.500.12811/349
dc.description.abstract Food insecurity remains a major challenge worldwide, especially among the rural areas of developing nation. Women and children are most vulnerable to this phenomenon. However, while many studies have assessed farming households’ food security status in general, there is dearth of information on vegetable farmers’, who are mostly women, food security status in particular. This study, therefore, investigated the food security status of vegetable farming households, its drivers and coping strategies in Kwara State, Nigeria. Descriptive statistics, food insecurity index and logistic regression were used to analysed data collected from 180 respondents. The findings showed that food insecurity remains a major challenge in rural areas as only 45.55% were food secure. The food secure group surpassed the food security line by 17%. Food insecure group fell below the food security line by 36% with a daily average calorie intake of 1581.35 kcal. Annual income (p< 0.1), cooperative membership (p< 0.1), vegetable production (p< 0.05) and access to credit (p< 0.05) were the significant factors enhancing their food security status, while household size (p< 0.01) negatively influenced it. The widely used food insecurity coping mechanisms by the households were eating less expensive food, eating wild fruits, reducing rational consumption, allowing children to eat first, borrowing money to buy food, buying food on credit and skipping meal within a day. The study recommends encouragement of vegetable production through provision of credit facilities to the farmers as this would enhance their food security status. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher "Ion Ionescu de la Brad" University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, Iași en_US
dc.subject food insecurity en_US
dc.subject calorie intake en_US
dc.subject rural women en_US
dc.subject coping strategies en_US
dc.subject vegetable production en_US
dc.title Food security status: its drivers and coping strategies among vegetable farming households en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.author.affiliation Ridwan Mukaila, Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State, Nigeria
dc.author.affiliation Abraham Falola, Olubunmi Abayomi Omotesho, Department of Agricultural Economics and Farm Management, University of Ilorin, Kwara State, Nigeria
dc.publicationName Cercetări Agronomice în Moldova
dc.volume 53
dc.issue 4
dc.publicationDate 2020
dc.startingPage 414
dc.endingPage 425
dc.identifier.eissn 2067-1865
dc.identifier.doi 10.46909/cerce-2020-035


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