Initiation Ceremonies and Household Food Security in Naipingo Ward, Nachingwea District, Lindi, Tanzania
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59557/rpj.25.2.2025.199Keywords:
Initiation ceremonies , Food security, Food availability , Food access, Food utilizationAbstract
The paper is based on a study on the initiation ceremonies and household food security that was conducted in Nachingwea District, Tanzania. It examined the association between initiation ceremonies and household food availability, involving 94 households. The study employed surveys and structured interviews to collect primary data, which were processed and analyzed through descriptive statistics, logistic regression, and cross-tabulation. It was observed that a substantial amount of food was used for initiation ceremonies, leading to food shortages. However, the association between initiation ceremonies and household food security was not statistically significant as household food security is influenced by several other factors. It is recommended that community members should understand that initiation ceremonies may affect food security in their households and therefore they need to increase food production while using their food resources wisely. On the other hand, policymakers should integrate cultural issues into food security intervention measures to develop more effective and equitable policies. The government, through extension officers, should educate community members on improving household food security and addressing food shortages by enhancing production through climate change adaptation strategies, agricultural diversification, irrigation farming, pest control, and reducing post-harvest losses by improving food storage facilities. The Ministry of Agriculture should strengthen agricultural financing strategies to end hunger, enhance food availability, and reduce malnutrition in all its forms.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Rural Planning Journal

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.


