Inhalt: Malnutrition, i.e. the undersupply of micro-nutrients, is a common phenomenon in the villages of West African Mali. Community gardening can help to overcome the gap between supply of and requirements for micro-nutrients. In addition to its effect on nutrition, community gardening supports the pro-poor orientation of economic growth, and has a potentially positive effect on human capital formation, communal coherence, and women’s empowerment. Water supply, however, is a major bottleneck for gardening in the Sahel zone. Based on a field survey using a “rapid rural appraisal”-inspired research method, the paper develops the argument for a de-linking of irrigation from deep wells (water mining) and argues in favour of a combination of water harvesting techniques and substantial improvements of the gardens’ micro-climate in a low external input yet technically appropriately sophisticated cultivation. The paper furthermore discusses traditional forms of social organisation and how to make them instrumental in supporting the new system.
Schlagwörter:Mali; Mali; Unterernährung; undernourishment; Gartenbau; horticulture; Wasser; water; Bewässerung; irrigation; Nahrungsmittel; food; Versorgung; supply; Armutsbekämpfung; combating poverty; Entwicklungshilfe; development aid; Geschlechterverhältnis; gender relations; Arbeitsteilung; division of labor; woman; ländliche Entwicklung; rural development; Westafrika; West Africa; Entwicklungsland; developing country; water harvesting
SSOAR Kategorie:Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie
Dokumenttyp:Graue Literatur, Bericht