MAPPING FOOD DESERTS IN THARAKA CONSTITUENCY USING COMPOSED INDEX OF CRITICAL ACCESSIBILITY TO FOOD AND LIVESTOCK MARKETS
Date
2021-10-07
Authors
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Publisher
Chuka University
Abstract
In agropastoral regions of Kenya, households often trek long distances to access food markets and sell livestock.
Distance defines physical accessibility and even utilisation of market facilities especially in semi-arid areas where
food insecurity and malnutrition are rampant. This phenomenon affects intra-regional food exchange and
consumption patterns. Close to 70 % of agropastoral farmers within Tharaka Constituency lack access to formal
markets for their produce. Studies on intra-variations in access to market services remains scanty, yet market
purchase account for most food consumed across urban and rural areas. Tharaka constituency lies in semi-arid area
characterised by erratic mild-to-acute food shortage seasons. This exploratory study utilised Geographic Information
Systems (GIS) to measure physical accessibility to open air food and livestock markets in Tharaka. Normative,
administrative and geospatial datasets were used in the geospatial analysis. Results showed that geographic
accessibility to market centers across the 883 villages in the constituency varied spatially. In terms of physical
accessibility to markets, 40.4% of the total population live in regions with very high-to-high inaccessibility risks
while 36.1% are found in areas with very low-to-low inaccessibility risks while 23.5% of the entire population exists
in places having moderate inaccessibility risks. From this, a large portion of population live in food deserts villages.
This spatial inequity negatively affects household food security and can explain the chronic hunger and malnutrition
problem experienced in the area. There is need for markets within high inaccessibility risk areas hereby referred as
food deserts to be upgraded and infrastructure thereof improved to enable intra-regional food mobility.
Description
dkinoti@chuka.ac.ke
Keywords
Geographic accessibility, Open air markets, Food security, GIS