File(s) under embargo
Reason: Embargoed until after publication by Liverpool University Press.
Informal irrigated vegetable value chains in urban Ghana: potential to improve food safety through changing stakeholder practices
Contaminated vegetables grown and consumed in cities of the Global South have adverse public health consequences. Through interviews with farmers, traders, consumers and institutional representatives, this article explores why stakeholders in the irrigated vegetable value chain in Accra continue unsafe practices. The multi-stakeholder data are analysed by combining a behavioural model with a framework of complex stakeholder interactions. Arguably, a systemic approach would help meet stakeholders’ opportunity, capability, and motivation needs and actualise current efforts to promote safe practices. Findings indicate the need for all stakeholders to develop a shared understanding of each other’s practices and co-design flexible arrangements that better integrate their diverse rationales, knowledge and constraints. Improving hygiene and food safety from farm to fork requires political commitment that accounts for land tenure insecurity and the high cost of safe water.
Funding
Water_WISER (EPSRC) - A Pinder, Cohort 1 : EP/S022066/1
History
School
- Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
- Social Sciences and Humanities
Department
- Geography and Environment
Research Unit
- Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC)
Published in
International Development Planning ReviewPublisher
Liverpool University PressVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Rights holder
© Liverpool University PressAcceptance date
2024-06-12Copyright date
2024ISSN
1474-6743eISSN
1478-3401Publisher version
Language
- en