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Realization of the right to adequate food and the nutritional status of land evictees: a case for mothers/caregivers and their children in rural Central Uganda

Realization of the right to adequate food and the nutritional status of land evictees: a case for mothers/caregivers and their children in rural Central Uganda

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dc.contributor.author Aziiza Nahalomo
dc.contributor.author Per Ole Iversen
dc.contributor.author Peter Milton Rukundo
dc.contributor.author Archileo N. Kaaya
dc.contributor.author Joyce K. Kikafunda
dc.contributor.author Wenche Barth Eide
dc.contributor.author Maritha Marais
dc.contributor.author Edward Wamala
dc.contributor.author Margaret Kabahenda
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:33Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:33Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.issn 1472698x
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48936
dc.description.abstract In developing countries like Uganda, the human right to adequate food (RtAF) is inextricably linked to access to land for households to feed themselves directly through production or means for its procurement. Whether RtAF is enjoyed among Ugandan land evictees, is unknown. We therefore explored this among land evictees (rights-holders) in Wakiso and Mpigi districts in rural Central Uganda. We assessed food accessibility and related coping strategies, diet quality and nutritional status of children 6–59 months old, and their caregivers. Effectiveness of the complaint and redress mechanisms in addressing RtAF violations was also explored. In this cross-sectional study, quantitative data was collected using a structured questionnaire, with food security and nutritional assessment methods from a total of 215 land evictees including 187 children aged 6–59 months. Qualitative data was collected by reviewing selected national and international documents on the RtAF and key informant interviews with 15 purposively sampled duty-bearers. These included individuals or representatives of the Uganda Human Rights Commission, Resident District Commissioner, Sub-county Chiefs, and local Council leaders. We found that 78% of land evictees had insufficient access to food while 69.4% had consumed a less diversified diet. A majority of evictees (85.2%) relied on borrowing food or help from others to cope with food shortages. Of the 187 children assessed, 9.6% were wasted, 18.2% were underweight and 34.2% were stunted. Small, but significant associations, were found between food accessibility, diet quality, food insecurity coping strategies; and the nutritional status of evictees. We observed that administrative, quasi-judicial and judicial mechanisms to provide adequate legal remedies regarding violations of the RtAF among evictees in Uganda are in place, but not effective in doing so. Land eviction without adequate legal remedies is a contributor to food insecurity and undernutrition in rural Central Uganda. It is essential that the Government strengthens and enforces the policy and legal environment to ensure adequate and timely compensation of evictees in order to reduce their vulnerability to food insecurity.
dc.description.sponsorship NORAD
dc.publisher BioMed Central
dc.relation.ispartof BMC international health and human rights
dc.subject Children
dc.subject Food insecurity
dc.subject Land evictions
dc.subject Mothers/caregivers
dc.subject Nutritional status
dc.subject The human right to adequate food
dc.subject Uganda
dc.subject.mesh Adaptation, Psychological
dc.subject.mesh Caregivers
dc.subject.mesh Child, Preschool
dc.subject.mesh Cross-Sectional Studies
dc.subject.mesh Developing Countries
dc.subject.mesh Diet/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Family Characteristics
dc.subject.mesh Female
dc.subject.mesh Food Supply
dc.subject.mesh Human Rights
dc.subject.mesh Humans
dc.subject.mesh Infant
dc.subject.mesh Male
dc.subject.mesh Mothers/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Nutritional Status/physiology
dc.subject.mesh Rural Population
dc.subject.mesh Surveys and Questionnaires
dc.subject.mesh Uganda
dc.subject.mesh Wasting Syndrome
dc.title Realization of the right to adequate food and the nutritional status of land evictees: a case for mothers/caregivers and their children in rural Central Uganda
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1186/s12914-018-0162-6
dc.identifier.pmid 29793472
dc.identifier.mag 2804478309
dc.identifier.pmc PMC5968527
dc.identifier.lens 000-046-400-760-994
dc.identifier.volume 18
dc.identifier.issue 1
dc.identifier.spage 1
dc.identifier.epage 13
dc.subject.lens-fields Public health
dc.subject.lens-fields Business
dc.subject.lens-fields Government
dc.subject.lens-fields Vulnerability
dc.subject.lens-fields Eviction
dc.subject.lens-fields Socioeconomics
dc.subject.lens-fields Food security
dc.subject.lens-fields Malnutrition
dc.subject.lens-fields Developing country
dc.subject.lens-fields Qualitative property


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