Abstract

Milk, provided it is safe, provides important micronutrients that can combat hidden hunger (undernutrition). Many peri-urban poor people in Tanzania and Kenya use informal markets to purchase milk in order to provide nutritional benefits to their families. Household decision-making processes play an influential role in how much milk to buy and how it is treated. This exploratory qualitative study, conducted in peri-urban Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, examined how access to milk, control over milk handling and safety, and intra-household milk distribution are affected by gender dynamics and by changes in milk availability and price. Focus group discussions with 48 women and 45 men and key informant interviews with 8 men and 8 women, all of whom were parents or caretakers to young children, were conducted. The results indicate that gender roles in milk purchase and handling vary. Generally, providing enough milk is a man’s responsibility, whilst a woman is expected to ensure a nutritious diet. Yet women’s limited decision-making power regarding milk purchase can restrict their ability to provide sufficient milk. Interventions to promote safe milk consumption need to consider gender norms, strengthen intra-household collaborative decision-making, include men in nutrition programming, and increase women’s control over food expenditures.

Highlights

  • We explore in detail one pathway towards achieving Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2, namely, strengthening nutrition through animal source proteins

  • An exploration of the agentic component involved in the “gender norms façade” would help broaden both an understanding of the strategies purposefully enacted by women to create or maintain a new decision-making space, and the concept of “power through agency” within the empowerment discourse

  • This helps to ensure that the gender norms façade is maintained, regardless of the reality of decision-making arrangements in the household

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Summary

Introduction

The United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2 is “Zero Hunger”. This is a commitment to “end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainable agriculture” [1]. Our ultimate research interest is in understanding how gendered intra-household decision-making processes affect the ability of families to provide safe and sufficient milk to their children. Our aim is to understand the current dairy purchasing and consumption practices of participant peri-urban consumers, the challenges they face in ensuring the safety of the milk they consume, milk allocation practices within the household, and how the interplay of women’s and men’s decision-making in these processes affects each one of these domains of inquiry

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