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Household Food Insecurity in Urban Slums: A Case Study of Dhaka City, Bangladesh

  1. Title statementHousehold Food Insecurity in Urban Slums: A Case Study of Dhaka City, Bangladesh [rukopis] / Poushali Bhattacharjee
    Additional Variant TitlesNedostatky potravin v domácnostech v městských slumech: případová studie města Dhaka, Bangladéš
    Personal name Bhattacharjee, Poushali, (dissertant)
    Translated titleHousehold food insecurity in urban slums: A case study of Dhaka City, Bangladesh
    Issue data2019
    Phys.des.45 p.(15,337 words) : mapy, schémata, tab. + One CD
    NoteOponent Gianni Vaggi
    Ved. práce Maria Sassi
    Another responsib. Vaggi, Gianni, (opponent)
    Sassi, Maria, (thesis advisor)
    Another responsib. Univerzita Palackého. Katedra rozvojových studií (degree grantor)
    Keywords Slum * food insecurity * indicators * determinants * DH model * IHS transformation * Slum * food insecurity * indicators * determinants * DH model * IHS transformation
    Form, Genre diplomové práce master's theses
    UDC (043)378.2
    CountryČesko
    Languageangličtina
    Document kindPUBLIKAČNÍ ČINNOST
    TitleMgr.
    Degree programNavazující
    Degree programGeography
    Degreee disciplineInternational Development Studies
    book

    book

    Kvalifikační práceDownloadedSizedatum zpřístupnění
    00249266-850378263.pdf784.5 MB31.05.2019
    PosudekTyp posudku
    00249266-ved-276834690.pdfPosudek vedoucího
    00249266-opon-636873668.pdfPosudek oponenta

    Bangladesh is the 10th most densely populated country in the world which put stress on its ability to secure the equal right to food for all group of people irrespective of socioeconomic condition. The National Food Policy of the country declared slum households as one of the most distressed groups in terms of fulfilling the nutritional need. The capital city Dhaka alone is the living place of humongous number (1.06 million) of slum population. The study conducted on 580 households of Dhaka City Corporation area has identified 75.52% of the households as food insecure by comparing their calorie intake with the energy requirement threshold for Bangladesh (2430 Kcal/AE/Day). The majority share of the calorie in their everyday diet plan came mostly from cereals, sugar, oil, and outside meal, which showcased a poor quality of diet. The households spent the lion's share of their monthly expenditure (72.77%) only on food consumption, which compelled to cut off essential nonfood expenditure. The Inverse Hyperbolic Sine transformed Double Hurdle model has been applied, to analyze the determinants of the presence and depth of food insecurity among households, as it accommodates the heteroskedastic, correlated and not normally distributed error. The Per capita monthly income; percentage of food expenditure; diet diversity; household size; sex of household head; number of the female wage earner, children under five years and unemployed person within 15 to 64 years; proportion of adult female member and location of the slum were significant factors determining the food security status of households. Whereas, while exploring the determinants of the depth in food calorie gap among food insecure households, some other factors like wealth index, source of drinking water, overall HH security and migration of HH head from abroad came out as important factors along with the previous factor list except for the sex of the household head. To improve the situation of the slum dwellers, the government should concentrate on more coverage of social safety net programs, legal service provision of water and sanitation and human capital development-oriented program and training primarily focusing the women.Bangladesh is the 10th most densely populated country in the world which put stress on its ability to secure the equal right to food for all group of people irrespective of socioeconomic condition. The National Food Policy of the country declared slum households as one of the most distressed groups in terms of fulfilling the nutritional need. The capital city Dhaka alone is the living place of humongous number (1.06 million) of slum population. The study conducted on 580 households of Dhaka City Corporation area has identified 75.52% of the households as food insecure by comparing their calorie intake with the energy requirement threshold for Bangladesh (2430 Kcal/AE/Day). The majority share of the calorie in their everyday diet plan came mostly from cereals, sugar, oil, and outside meal, which showcased a poor quality of diet. The households spent the lion's share of their monthly expenditure (72.77%) only on food consumption, which compelled to cut off essential nonfood expenditure. The Inverse Hyperbolic Sine transformed Double Hurdle model has been applied, to analyze the determinants of the presence and depth of food insecurity among households, as it accommodates the heteroskedastic, correlated and not normally distributed error. The Per capita monthly income; percentage of food expenditure; diet diversity; household size; sex of household head; number of the female wage earner, children under five years and unemployed person within 15 to 64 years; proportion of adult female member and location of the slum were significant factors determining the food security status of households. Whereas, while exploring the determinants of the depth in food calorie gap among food insecure households, some other factors like wealth index, source of drinking water, overall HH security and migration of HH head from abroad came out as important factors along with the previous factor list except for the sex of the household head. To improve the situation of the slum dwellers, the government should concentrate on more coverage of social safety net programs, legal service provision of water and sanitation and human capital development-oriented program and training primarily focusing the women.

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