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Linking household access to food and social capital typologies in Phalombe District, Malawi

Linking household access to food and social capital typologies in Phalombe District, Malawi
Linking household access to food and social capital typologies in Phalombe District, Malawi
Food security remains a major sustainability challenge in many parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. Food security has numerous determinants that are complex and interlinked, with one of them being social capital. Social capital reflects an individual’s, household’s, or community’s social networks, social interactions, and social support systems that can be mobilized in times of need to maintain, among others, livelihoods or food security. This study aims to further understand how typologies of social capital are associated with household food security in Southern Malawi, with a focus on access to food. We unpack social capital into three typologies, namely bonding, bridging, and linking social capital, and establish which one is most strongly associated with household access to food, and whether this varies by the gender of the household head. To achieve this, we analyze secondary data from 382 households collected through the Malawian Fourth Integrated Household Survey (IHS4), using principal axis factor analysis and logistic regression analysis. Our findings demonstrate that bonding and bridging social capital are associated with better household access to food, while linking social capital was associated with lower household access to food. Bonding social capital was most strongly associated for female-headed households and linking social capital for male-headed households, highlighting that there are differences between such households. This work confirms observations from other related studies in Sub-Saharan Africa exploring the interface of social capital and food security. It also highlights the importance of both acknowledging the gender of the household head and of unpacking social capital into its typologies when considering food security.
food access, food security, gender, Malawi, social capital
1862-4065
1721-1737
Craig, Ailish
c5517ed2-7bf7-4fcd-bf3a-a98832ed018b
Hutton, Craig
9102617b-caf7-4538-9414-c29e72f5fe2e
Lewis, Laura A.
3b8fef98-e0ff-4acf-879f-ed9b1c318890
Musa, Frank B.
c2f74e55-f945-4915-b116-ac85e6948756
Sheffield, Justin
dd66575b-a4dc-4190-ad95-df2d6aaaaa6b
Craig, Ailish
c5517ed2-7bf7-4fcd-bf3a-a98832ed018b
Hutton, Craig
9102617b-caf7-4538-9414-c29e72f5fe2e
Lewis, Laura A.
3b8fef98-e0ff-4acf-879f-ed9b1c318890
Musa, Frank B.
c2f74e55-f945-4915-b116-ac85e6948756
Sheffield, Justin
dd66575b-a4dc-4190-ad95-df2d6aaaaa6b

Craig, Ailish, Hutton, Craig, Lewis, Laura A., Musa, Frank B. and Sheffield, Justin (2023) Linking household access to food and social capital typologies in Phalombe District, Malawi. Sustainability Science, 18 (4), 1721-1737. (doi:10.1007/s11625-023-01329-w).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Food security remains a major sustainability challenge in many parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. Food security has numerous determinants that are complex and interlinked, with one of them being social capital. Social capital reflects an individual’s, household’s, or community’s social networks, social interactions, and social support systems that can be mobilized in times of need to maintain, among others, livelihoods or food security. This study aims to further understand how typologies of social capital are associated with household food security in Southern Malawi, with a focus on access to food. We unpack social capital into three typologies, namely bonding, bridging, and linking social capital, and establish which one is most strongly associated with household access to food, and whether this varies by the gender of the household head. To achieve this, we analyze secondary data from 382 households collected through the Malawian Fourth Integrated Household Survey (IHS4), using principal axis factor analysis and logistic regression analysis. Our findings demonstrate that bonding and bridging social capital are associated with better household access to food, while linking social capital was associated with lower household access to food. Bonding social capital was most strongly associated for female-headed households and linking social capital for male-headed households, highlighting that there are differences between such households. This work confirms observations from other related studies in Sub-Saharan Africa exploring the interface of social capital and food security. It also highlights the importance of both acknowledging the gender of the household head and of unpacking social capital into its typologies when considering food security.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 March 2023
Published date: July 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council through the South Coast Doctoral Training Partnership (Grant No. ES/P000673/1) and the ‘Building REsearch Capacity for sustainable water and food security in drylands of sub-saharan Africa’ (BRECcIA) which is supported by UK Research and Innovation as part of the Global Challenges Research Fund, under Grant No. NE/P021093/1. Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: food access, food security, gender, Malawi, social capital

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477277
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477277
ISSN: 1862-4065
PURE UUID: 454eacb9-d5ff-4606-9627-a7d93b80adb4
ORCID for Craig Hutton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5896-756X
ORCID for Laura A. Lewis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2782-7254
ORCID for Justin Sheffield: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2400-0630

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Date deposited: 01 Jun 2023 17:07
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:40

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Contributors

Author: Ailish Craig
Author: Craig Hutton ORCID iD
Author: Laura A. Lewis ORCID iD
Author: Frank B. Musa

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