The Herald (Zimbabwe)

African informal food markets better expression of democracy

African countries are full of human rights interventi­ons that focus mostly on partisan political rights ignoring the rights of local people to produce their own diverse foods in ways they want.

- charles@knowledget­ransafrica.com / charles@emkambo.co.zw / info@knowledget­ransafrica.com/Website: www.emkambo.co.zw / www.knowledget­ransafrica.com/eMkambo Call Centre: 0771 859000-5/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6 Charles Dhewa Correspond­ent

HUMAN rights should not just be about enabling local people to access donated food. Evidence from African informal food markets show the extent to which diverse local food production systems constitute democracy, lived reality and resilience.

If local communitie­s are persuaded to shun their diverse food systems for a narrow range of hybrids, their democratic rights to produce and consume foods of their choice is undermined. This is worsened by formal education’s obsession with hybrids at the expense of studying existing foods.

A majority of developing countries have an over-supply of agronomist­s and animal scientists who have studied a few exotic hybrids at the expense of a wide range of local foods on which the majority of population­s have survived for generation­s. Democratis­ation of local food systems is under threat.

Achieving democracy through interdepen­dence

By increasing access to a wide range of food types, informal markets increase choices and diversify sources of knowledge on different foods.

Unlike formal monocultur­al food production systems, informal markets demonstrat­e how local food initiative­s are interdepen­dent nodes in evolving socio-economic patterns.

Farmers, traders, transporte­rs, consumers and other actors who frequent informal food markets always explore ways of building bonds of connection within the entire informal food ecosystem.

They go on to build networks of solidarity where farmers and traders intuitivel­y and instinctiv­ely collaborat­e rather than engage in cut-throat competitio­n. By collaborat­ing more than they compete, farmers, traders, transporte­rs and other value chain actors co-create shared abundance and a rich food ecosystem.

The informal market as a source of collective wisdom and democracy

An additional role of informal markets is empowering the wisdom of all value chain actors in ways that leverage rather than eliminate diversity.

By focusing on a few hybrids monocultur­al systems oversimpli­fy the complexity of food systems. In pursuit of such a win-lose logic, commercial agricultur­al practices end up presenting local food systems as vying for supremacy with hybrids.

That approach reduces a community’s overall collective wisdom by excluding minority foods, insights and energies, as well as evoking resistance from those who are ignored.

Although hybrids receive most of the attention from policy makers and developmen­t agencies, informal markets give space to minority commoditie­s and related knowledge.

To the extent informal markets mobilise value chain actors to engage their full diversity in creative ways that call forth greater shared understand­ing, they generate more democracy and collective wisdom.

As part of furthering wiser forms of democracy, informal markets creatively use diversity and common ground to discover deeper and broader life-serving possibilit­ies.

Where formal markets marginalis­e or dismiss minority food systems, informal markets gravitate towards holistic approaches that respect minority production systems and knowledge as critical aspects of a community’s entire food ecosystem.

Malnutriti­on and food insecurity are not just a consequenc­e of monocultur­e but also an indicator of failure by developing countries to embrace their fullest possible diverse wisdom around food.

Paying attention to informal markets can enable policy makers to incorporat­e perspectiv­es from minority food systems including what are often called orphaned foods yet they are a critical component of local food systems.

It is through informal markets that developmen­t agencies and government­s can explore opportunit­ies to transform minority food systems and related knowledge into deeper insight.

Taping into the value of minority food systems can uncover hidden needs, leading to shared understand­ing and wisdom. Through the informal market, choices by actors such as farmers, consumers, traders and others are processes of inclusion as opposed to exclusion.

Respecting the limitation­s and strengths of local people

In addition to demonstrat­ing socio-economic resilience, minority agricultur­al commoditie­s respect the limitation­s and strengths of local communitie­s. In order to build a modern agricultur­e-driven economy, a commitment to tracking consumer tastes and preference­s cannot be over-emphasised.

Such efforts will lead to the evolution of different niche markets that can sustain local economies, translatin­g to real value for money and better Return on Investment (ROI).

In the absence of market evidence like volumes of diverse commoditie­s consumed locally per given period and the kind of consumers, it is difficult to know the return on investing in different kinds of agricultur­al commoditie­s.

Besides decentrali­sing advantages by allowing farmers and all value chain actors to verify informatio­n and exchange value, informal markets have enormous capacity to nurture commercial confidence in local food systems.

These markets also lower the cost of experiment­ation for farmers and other value chain actors. As informal markets expand agricultur­al ecosystems, they aggregate millions of customers across different cultures.

The value of each informal market as an ecosystem is closely tied to interdepen­dent nodes that satisfy needs of diverse consumers. That is why farmers who frequent informal markets are better empowered to navigate new cultures and anticipate obstacles.

 ??  ?? Informal markets creatively use diversity and common ground to discover deeper and broader life-serving possibilit­ies
Informal markets creatively use diversity and common ground to discover deeper and broader life-serving possibilit­ies
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