Urban Poverty Report: A Study of Poverty, Food Insecurity and Resilience in Afghan Cities

Publication language
English
Pages
65pp
Date published
01 Jan 2014
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Food and nutrition, Food security, Poverty, Urban
Countries
Afghanistan
Organisations
Samuel Hall

There are now 24% of the population of Afghanistan living in urban areas. At the core of the urbanisation trend lies the complex question of migration and displacement in a country, where a large share of the population is or has been in movement. This urbanisation trend comes with increasing urban poverty and food insecurity: the latest National Risk and Vulnerability Assessment (NRVA) found that 34% of the urban population were food insecure as against 29% of the rural population. This confirms the necessity to look into the acute problem of urban food insecurity in the country to reduce the risk of chronic food crises in Afghan cities. Surprisingly, whilst urban food security is increasingly considered to be a priority by national and international stakeholders, there are important gaps in the knowledge of its socio-economic determinants and its consequences, leading to gaps in the provision of services and assistance to the urban poor.

In order to fill this gap, People in Need (PIN) and the Danish Refugee Council (DRC) commissioned Samuel Hall to conduct a large urban poverty study in Kabul, Herat, Jalalabad, Mazar-e- Sharif and Kandahar. The study is based on a 5,400-household survey and was presented to key stakeholders during a series of consultation in September 2014.