Authors
Kenneth Lynch, Roy Maconachie, Tony Binns, Paul Tengbe, Kabba Bangura
Publication date
2013/1/1
Journal
Applied Geography
Volume
36
Pages
31-39
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Sierra Leone has recently emerged from a long period of political instability and is ranked among the world's poorest countries. During the decade-long civil war of the 1990s, widespread forced out-migration left much of the countryside abandoned, as rural residents fled to the safety of the capital city, Freetown. Consequently, food production became severely dislocated and, in the post-conflict era, the state of the agricultural sector has become a major concern to governmental and non-governmental development agencies. Focussing on the question of urban food security in Freetown, this paper examines the incidence, dynamics and significance of urban and peri-urban agriculture (UPA) among households, at a crucial point in Sierra Leone's post-conflict reconstruction phase. Drawing on recent field-based data, the paper contributes to the growing debate concerning how urban planning and development might …
Total citations
201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024112137121341212545