Mapping and characterising the urban agricultural landscape of two intermediate-sized Ghanaian cities
(2018) In Land Use Policy 70. p.182-197- Abstract
Extending beyond previous research biases towards large cities or analyses based largely on one type of urban agriculture (UA) (such as market gardening, or home gardening), this research aimed to investigate all forms of UA within two intermediate-sized Ghanaian cities (Techiman and Tamale). Where was being farmed? For whom, and why? The paper considers how findings compare to Ghana's larger cities, and possible implications for theory and for planning. Methods included remote sensing, field mapping, interviews and a 1000-household per city questionnaire. The most common reason for farming was food supplementation. This was often via staple foods, particularly maize, rather than the leafy vegetables common in larger cities’ market... (More)
Extending beyond previous research biases towards large cities or analyses based largely on one type of urban agriculture (UA) (such as market gardening, or home gardening), this research aimed to investigate all forms of UA within two intermediate-sized Ghanaian cities (Techiman and Tamale). Where was being farmed? For whom, and why? The paper considers how findings compare to Ghana's larger cities, and possible implications for theory and for planning. Methods included remote sensing, field mapping, interviews and a 1000-household per city questionnaire. The most common reason for farming was food supplementation. This was often via staple foods, particularly maize, rather than the leafy vegetables common in larger cities’ market gardening. Farming was predominantly via home gardening, particularly for the better off. The larger city of Tamale also sustained organised irrigated-vegetable market gardens. Findings suggest a picture not dissimilar to Ghana's larger cities but with greater prevalence of home gardening, and a dominance of staple foods rather than perishable or high value crops. A compelling finding, which has received less attention in the literature, is the extent of, and roles played by, what this study refers to as ‘institutional land. Both Ghanaian Ministry of Food and Agriculture's policy framing, and market crisis theorising, of the drivers and role of UA were not found to be an accurate reflection of Techiman and Tamale's UA. Rather than being a localised survival activity of the poor or marginalised, of recent migrants, or of predominantly women, these cities contained a large scale and diverse spatiality of UA mainly for non-poor and non-migrants’ supplementation of their staple food larder. Results emphasise the context-specific nature of a city's urban agriculture, and underline the need for researchers and UA advocates to be specific about the form of UA under the microscope when making claims for ‘an urban agriculture’.
(Less)
- author
- Mackay, Heather LU
- publishing date
- 2018-01
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Staple foods, Tamale, Techiman, Urban agriculture types, Urban food, Urban land use
- in
- Land Use Policy
- volume
- 70
- pages
- 16 pages
- publisher
- Elsevier
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85032259522
- ISSN
- 0264-8377
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.10.031
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- additional info
- Publisher Copyright: © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
- id
- 5b0c9daf-4079-4e3f-9047-bd4a4d1bb4a9
- date added to LUP
- 2022-02-03 09:57:00
- date last changed
- 2022-03-05 18:33:13
@article{5b0c9daf-4079-4e3f-9047-bd4a4d1bb4a9, abstract = {{<p>Extending beyond previous research biases towards large cities or analyses based largely on one type of urban agriculture (UA) (such as market gardening, or home gardening), this research aimed to investigate all forms of UA within two intermediate-sized Ghanaian cities (Techiman and Tamale). Where was being farmed? For whom, and why? The paper considers how findings compare to Ghana's larger cities, and possible implications for theory and for planning. Methods included remote sensing, field mapping, interviews and a 1000-household per city questionnaire. The most common reason for farming was food supplementation. This was often via staple foods, particularly maize, rather than the leafy vegetables common in larger cities’ market gardening. Farming was predominantly via home gardening, particularly for the better off. The larger city of Tamale also sustained organised irrigated-vegetable market gardens. Findings suggest a picture not dissimilar to Ghana's larger cities but with greater prevalence of home gardening, and a dominance of staple foods rather than perishable or high value crops. A compelling finding, which has received less attention in the literature, is the extent of, and roles played by, what this study refers to as ‘institutional land. Both Ghanaian Ministry of Food and Agriculture's policy framing, and market crisis theorising, of the drivers and role of UA were not found to be an accurate reflection of Techiman and Tamale's UA. Rather than being a localised survival activity of the poor or marginalised, of recent migrants, or of predominantly women, these cities contained a large scale and diverse spatiality of UA mainly for non-poor and non-migrants’ supplementation of their staple food larder. Results emphasise the context-specific nature of a city's urban agriculture, and underline the need for researchers and UA advocates to be specific about the form of UA under the microscope when making claims for ‘an urban agriculture’.</p>}}, author = {{Mackay, Heather}}, issn = {{0264-8377}}, keywords = {{Staple foods; Tamale; Techiman; Urban agriculture types; Urban food; Urban land use}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{182--197}}, publisher = {{Elsevier}}, series = {{Land Use Policy}}, title = {{Mapping and characterising the urban agricultural landscape of two intermediate-sized Ghanaian cities}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.10.031}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.10.031}}, volume = {{70}}, year = {{2018}}, }