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An Analysis of Malnutrition in Rural Zambia and the “Realigning Agriculture to Improve Nutrition”
(RAIN) Project
Vanessa Young - 1001616655
GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH CHL 5700H
Assignment #3
Submitted to Suzanne Jackson
April 4, 2014
Introduction
Zambia is a beautiful country in southern Africa with a thriving agricultural industry; however,
beneath the plentiful harvest lies a hidden story of malnutrition. That is why Concern Worldwide
has developed an intervention which integrates agriculture, nutrition, and women’s empowerment
with the aim of reducing the harmful effects of stunting in children in rural Zambia. A secondary yet
ambitious goal is to identify a replicable pathway to success which can be scaled up for countries
around the world (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). This paper will first discuss malnutrition in
Zambia as viewed through the Labonte and Torgerson (2005) framework of globalization and
health. Next, the RAIN project will be summarized, and its stakeholder relationships and evaluation
plan will be described and critically analyzed.
Zambia’s Malnutrition within a Global Health Framework
A person’s health – and, by extension, their nutrition – does not develop in isolation; it is affected
by a web of interacting factors at the household, community, domestic, global, and superordinate
levels. A global framework such as that of Labonte and Torgerson (2005) helps to delineate these
influences and demonstrate how they interact to produce health outcomes. For this paper, the
health outcome of focus is stunted growth directly caused by malnutrition among the people in
Mumbwa district, Central province, Zambia.
Health outcomes
Malnutrition triggers a third of all child deaths globally each year (UNICEF, 2013). Not only does this
cause physical damage, but its ripple effects extend also into the mental and social realms, affecting
individuals and societies alike. Poorly nourished people develop poor health and work performance,
and in this way malnutrition drains national resources while undermining investments in education
and health (FAO, 2004). Nutritional well-being of a population is of utmost importance – and indeed
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a precondition – for any nation's development while simultaneously reflecting the efficiency of
national resource allocation (FAO, 2004). The consequences exist not only in the present but,
indeed, can extend for generations.
A large proportion of Zambia’s population suffers from the effects of malnutrition. Current
measures indicate that 45% of children are moderately or severely stunted, although wasting
affects only 5% of children (UNICEF, 2014) – the causes of which often begin long before the child is
even born. Mothers who received poor nutrition during pre-conception, pregnancy, and lactation
are more likely to have children who are stunted, have developmental problems and weaker
immune systems. These disadvantages translate into overall higher mortality rates and therefore
unreached potential and economic losses on a macro level (WHO, 2013). Also, undernutrition and
other health conditions have reciprocally-influential relationships. For example, tuberculosis,
malaria, and HIV can both bring about, and be precipitated by, malnutrition (UNICEF, 2013).
Currently in Zambia, 11% percent of babies are born underweight (UNICEF, 2014), indicating
maternal malnutrition.
Stunting is a form of chronic malnutrition which occurs over time, caused by poor food quality, poor
feeding practices, and/or frequent infections, leaving children short for their age (UNICEF, 2009). It
can also result in diminished cognitive and physical development leading to poor performance in
school and reduced productivity as adults, resulting in lower earnings. Furthermore, children who
experience stunting are subject to higher risk of infections and disease compared with those who
were not stunted (UNICEF, 2013). Stunting is of particular concern among younger children because
once a child reaches the age of two, it is largely irreversible (WHO, 2013) and its lasting effects put
children at a disadvantage for the rest of their lives. Tackling undernutrition has a wider scope than
just trying to reduce an indicator such as stunting. Adequately addressing this issue improves
communities, restores potential, and breaks this damaging, destructive cycle.
Household Contexts
At the household level in Zambia, several factors such as dietary patterns, infant feeding practices,
and the role of women influence nutrition outcomes. One of the biggest nutritional needs in this
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area is dietary diversity. Although agriculture is the dominant industry, there is little variety in
commodities; maize and cotton account for the majority of farmland. Naturally, this affects what is
consumed at the household level and therefore has repercussions for nutritional status. A baseline
survey for the RAIN project conducted in 2011 captured current eating patterns and showed that
although almost no households experienced hunger, diets were monotonous overall and
dominated by maize. Only about half of households had consumed iron-rich food such as meat, fish,
poultry, or eggs within the past month (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b). These results
highlight the fact that while there is generally enough food in rural Zambia (i.e., people have access
to sufficient amounts of calories), there is a lack of dietary variety which leads to micronutrient
deficiencies.
The same baseline survey also recorded feeding practices in Mumbwa district. Virtually all infants
were breastfed until 8 months, and many into their second year. However, exclusive breastfeeding
was rare and low-diversity complementary foods along with water began to displace breastmilk for
many as early as a couple months of age (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b). Such practices can
be detrimental to the proper growth of a child which is why the WHO recommends exclusive
breastfeeding to 6 months (and continued breastfeeding with appropriate complementary feeding
until the age of 2 and beyond) (WHO, 2015). Although there is an assumption that harmful practices
in infant feeding such as these which contribute to stunting can be modified through education,
data from the RAIN study suggests there is a more complex situation. According to the baseline
survey, although a majority of mothers knew what they should be feeding their children, inability to
access the right foods and competing time demands between caring for children and agricultural
work made the implementation of this knowledge difficult (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b).
Many of the nutrition-influencing determinants at the household level are tied to traditional gender
roles. In rural Zambia – and many other African and Asian countries – in addition to being
responsible for producing food for their families, women carry out a significant amount of daily
domestic labor and often engage in piece-work to help make ends meet (Kent and MacRae, 2010).
Taking care of children is also an added constraint on time; these responsibilities all compete with
and reduce the amount of work that can be achieved on the family farm (Kent and MacRae, 2010).
One Zambian woman, in an interview on this topic explained this daily struggle: “The problem is
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that I cannot cultivate a big portion of land [because]… I have to do piecework so I can feed my
family. I don’t eat enough so I don’t have enough energy for my land” (Kent and MacRae, 2010). It is
not difficult to see the relationships between women’s work, food, and nutrition. Women play the
role of both food producers and food providers at the household level therefore addressing their
needs is critical in addressing food insecurity (Kent and MacRae, 2010).
Traditional gender roles heavily affect household operation in Zambia, even influencing food
allocation patterns. Women – even if pregnant – prioritize the food needs of men and children
above their own. In taking smaller meals for herself, the woman’s nutrition status is hindered
(particularly when food is scarce), which in turn reduces the energy the woman has to spend on
cultivating crops (Kent and MacRae, 2010). Access to contraceptives, another gendered
determinant of health among Zambian women, is 41% (UNICEF, 2014). The resulting fertility rate is
5.7 births per woman (UNICEF, 2014) which translates into a large number of dependants for each
woman to feed, and a significant amount of time spent being pregnant, breastfeeding, and caring
for infants. Consequently, time spent cultivating food is further reduced. This may explain why
female heads of households cultivate smaller pieces of land compared to male heads of households
(Mofya-Mukuka, 2014b), and earn less than half than that of males as measured by average per
capita income among smallholder households (Sitko, 2014).
Community and Domestic Contexts
As community and domestic influences affecting nutritional outcomes in rural Zambia are
intertwined, they will be discussed here together. Zambia, a former British colony named Northern
Rhodesia, has been one of the most politically stable countries in southern Africa since gaining
independence in 1964 (Irish Aid, n.d.). The largest catalyst for its economic development has been
in mining its large reserves of high-quality copper (CIA, 2014; SCIAF, 2007), although as in many
industries, heavy reliance upon natural resources comes with both a blessing and a curse. In the
case of mining, the migration of labor to meet industry demand (both within Zambia and
throughout southern Africa) has resulted in high urbanization and a weak rural lobby (Scott, 2002).
As for agriculture, several issues will be highlighted below.
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Although droughts, fluctuating copper prices, and business corruption have been obstacles to
development, Zambia’s economy has grown at a rate of more than 6% GDP per year since 2005
(some reasons for this will be expanded upon later). Economic growth in Zambia, however, is not
translating into poverty reduction. According to Mofya-Mukuka (2014a), for every 1% increase in
per capita GDP, the associated decline in rural poverty is a mere 0.25%. One reason for this is that
residents in rural areas rely heavily on agriculture for their livelihoods, yet there are market-
distorting agricultural policies hindering economic growth (CIA, 2014) which will be discussed
shortly.
Agriculture is a mainstay for a large segment of Zambian population, constituting 85% of the labor
force (CIA, 2014). Almost two thirds of the nation’s land is held by smallholder farmer families who
work to produce crops via low-technology rain-fed hoe cultivation (IFPRI, 2014a). Zambia’s small-
scale farmers have long depended on seed and fertilizer subsidies to produce maize. In the 1970’s
and 80’s, several innovations to improve the maize seed in Zambia were put in place in which state-
owned companies sold improved seed and fertilizer at reduced prices. This system and
accompanying government subsidies were later dismantled however, due to their fiscal burden
along with pressure from the International Monetary Fund as a part of structural adjustment
programs (SAPs) in the late 80s and early 90s (Smale and Birol, 2013).
Later, concerns over food security led to the reinstatement of farming subsidies in 2002 in the form
of the Farmer Input Support Program (FISP). The FISP is an initiative of the Zambian government as
a part of the poverty reduction strategy to reach food production goals (Burke, Jayne, and Sitko,
2012). The FISP provides seeds and fertilizers to farmers at heavily subsidized prices, accounting for
approximately three quarters of the Zambian government’s current agricultural budget (Burke,
Jayne, and Sitko, 2012). These subsidies remain controversial, though (Smale and Birol, 2013); the
FISP has been criticized for concurrently setting the goal of increasing total national maize
production to help keep up with urban consumption. This results in larger (wealthier) farm owners
receiving more of the benefits since they are thought to produce more marketable surplus than
smaller farms (Burke, Jayne, and Sitko, 2012; Mason, Jayne, and Mofya-Mukuka, 2013). As there is
little benefit for the rural poor, the FISP therefore has minimal impact on poverty reduction (Mofya-
Mukuka, 2014a).
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There is another strike against the rural farmer. Due to more than half of Zambia’s land being
covered by water or allocated as national parks, game management areas, and commercial
farmland (Natural Resources Consultative Forum, 2008; Zambia Tourism, 2015), many smallholder
farms are constrained. A quarter of households in Central province have less than half an hectare of
land to cultivate, and an average of 50% of smallholders say there’s no land available to expand
(Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a; Scott, 2002). This constraint is not unrelated to the fact that 78% of
smallholder farming households live below the $1.25 per person per day poverty line (Mason,
Jayne, and Mofya-Mukuka, 2013).
Another topic of relevance to this project is the gendered organizing of farming in Zambia. Land
allocation practices, as influenced by post-colonial development in which large areas were declared
as state land, favored men. In other areas however, where fishing was a main industry, women took
the dominant role in agriculture since fishing was seen as a male activity (Meinzen-Dick et al.,
2012). Gender inequality proves to be a deeply-entrenched barrier in Zambian society, however, as
women face difficulties in obtaining external services and support for agriculture (Kent and MacRae,
2010). Men outnumber women 2:1 for receiving assistance from the Fertiliser Support Programme
(Republic of Zambia, 2011a), for example, despite women carrying out the majority of physical
labor on smallholder farms.
Despite these challenges, the Zambian government has shown consistent commitment to
addressing malnutrition. In 1967 the National Food and Nutrition Act mandated the newly-
established National Food and Nutrition Commission (NFNC, within the Ministry of Health) to
promote food and nutrition activities and advise the government on these issues (Harris and
Drimie, 2012). More recently, the government, realizing the value of crop diversification for its
beneficial impacts on food security, has begun to promote high-nutrient crops (IFPRI, 2014a;
Mofya-Mukuka, 2014b). In 2004 following several droughts, the Zambian Ministry of Agriculture
and Cooperatives implemented a program for this purpose. Moving away from maize-only farming
towards incorporating other options such as cassava, cashews, soy beans, sunflowers, and sweet
potatoes could improve food security and nutrition status of smallholder household by not only
mitigating the risks of weather-, pest-, or disease- induced failure of mono-crops, but also providing
variety in diets (IFPRI, 2014a).
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And finally, the 2010 joining of Zambia with the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) initiative (SUN, 2014)
also demonstrates a renewed commitment to nutrition in the government agenda. While there are
many improvements to be made, (programs remain underfunded and more intersectoral consensus
must be reached (Taylor, 2012)), the momentum built from Zambia’s involvement in SUN makes the
RAIN project a less foreign ideas to the Zambian government. And just as the sun and rain are a
winning combination for successful agriculture, so these projects can work in tandem, building
synergy to ultimately to rid the country of food insecurity.
Global Contexts
At the global level, international market fluctuations, the signing of treaties, and donor aid with
stipulated conditions have in various ways influenced the Zambian economy, government spending
patterns, and individual economic access to food. To begin, world events such as the global financial
crisis, geopolitical conflicts, or natural disasters (particularly in oil-producing countries) can
influence international markets (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). As Zambia’s national
budget depends significantly upon donor support, downturns in the global economy can have
detrimental effects through public sector job losses and cuts in public services (Masiye, Chama,
Chitah, and Jonsson, 2010). This affects not only the national economy, but trickles down to the
individual level as well, tightening family budgets and worsening poverty.
International food commodity market prices are also subject to volatility and directly impact food
prices at the local level. Considering that two thirds of household income is spent on food in
developing countries, higher global food prices over the past few years have measurably reduced
the purchasing power of the average Zambian (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). Also, when
commodity prices are high, investors’ risk tolerance decreases. In Zambia over the past two
decades, almost two thirds of the international grain trading companies exited the country, citing
unpredictability of the Zambian government as a main reason (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias,
2014). Global trade, while often economically beneficial, is certainly not a static construct and can
worsen food insecurity at times.
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International cooperation can also have beneficial effects. The 54-country African Union (of which
Zambia is a member) recently made a commitment to the Malabo Declaration which aims to triple
intra-African agricultural trade and end hunger by 2025. One of the actionable pledges in the
declaration is for each government to allot at least 10% of their public expenditure to agriculture
(Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a). While this is no doubt easier for some countries to achieve than others,
the solidarity in action is certainly a source of momentum upon which individual countries such as
Zambia can build. Other actions at the national level will be discussed later.
Economic reform in Zambia begun in 1983 with a structural adjustment package supported by the
IMF and World Bank (OSDBA, 1996). The goal of the SAP in Zambia was to transform economic
policies and correct imbalances caused by “economic mismanagement and … misguided
development strategies” (OSDBA, 1996); significant changes were made in a number of sectors.
Progress was seen in agriculture by liberalizing production and trade which ultimately led to
improvements in exchange and interest rates (OSDBA, 1996). However, the corresponding
reduction of spending on public services such as health, education, and water sanitation in the
decade that followed caused living conditions in Zambia to deteriorate (Masiye, Chama, Chitah, and
Jonsson, 2010). It became clear that the SAP was a donor-driven reformulation of spending which
came with conditionalities not controlled by the Zambian government, and therefore not
appropriate in the local context. Any benefit to Zambian citizens certainly didn’t extend to rural
communities or the poor in general (Scott, 2002).
A discussion of global-level influences in Zambia would not be complete without including the
international pressure placed on the Zambian government to privatize copper mines in the 90’s
(CIA, 2014). Opinions are divided over its benefit despite the fact that copper mining currently
comprises 70% of total export earnings (Irish Aid, n.d.). Some see privatization as having spurred
economic growth through increased foreign investment which boosted copper output; others see
privatization as having undermined development. The government’s decision was largely swayed by
the World Bank and IMF which repeatedly attached privatization as a condition to several loan and
debt-relief packages (SCIAF, 2007). While there were clear benefits such as profits channeled back
to the government through taxation, the revenue has been relatively small (about a 3% royalty rate)
compared to that generated by private mines in other resource-rich countries (as high as 10-30%)
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(SCIAF, 2007). In a country with such high levels of poverty and malnutrition, this missed income
from Zambian-owned resources could have been spent on social services, infrastructure, and health
care to improve the standard of living and nutrition.
Superordinate Contexts
Zambia is a landlocked country naturally endowed with vast amounts of fertile land, water, and a
favorable climate for agricultural production (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a), although sometimes prone to
flash flooding and prolonged droughts (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). Maize is one of the
country’s top agricultural exports (along with sugar, tobacco, and cotton) and a ubiquitous dietary
staple (FAO, 2011). Zambia has a rapidly-growing population of 14.5 million (WHO, 2014; World
Bank, 2015), with about 60% of its residents living in rural areas (CIA, 2014). The Mumbwa district,
about 150km west of Lusaka, Zambia’s capital, constitutes 25% of Central province and contains a
reported population of 218,328 (Republic of Zambia, 2011b). In 2010, the population growth rate in
Central province was 2.3%, and even greater at 3.2% in Mumbwa district (Republic of Zambia,
2011b). Population growth presents food supply challenges on top of the fact that much of Zambia
still struggles under the weight of poverty. In 2010, over 80% of the rural population was living on
less than $1/day (WHO, 2014; Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a). Poverty and hunger are inextricably linked as
each worsens the other (their combination into one Millennium Development Goal may be seen to
signify their close relationship (United Nations, 2014)).
Additionally there is a heavy HIV/AIDS burden (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a) in Zambia with a prevalence
rate of 12.5% among those 15-49 years of age (UNAIDS, 2013). The burden of this disease not only
affects those suffering from it (being both a contributing cause and indirect effect of malnutrition),
but a high prevalence of HIV/AIDS also influences food insecurity by reducing productivity across
sectors – including public administration – and therefore brings damaging socio-economic effects
(Scott, 2002). The quality and duration of the average life becomes significantly diminished; life
expectancy at 55 for females and 58 for males, resulting in almost half the population being under
the age of 15, and 90% under the age of 45 (UNICEF, 2014; Republic of Zambia, 2014). This bottom-
heavy population pyramid means a smaller number of working adults are supporting a larger
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number of dependents and, unfortunately, is one of the reasons that 28% of Zambian children are
involved in child labor, mostly in agriculture (United States Department of Labor, 2013).
RAIN Project Summary
From household to superordinate levels, the influencers described above interact to produce an
unfortunate recipe for malnutrition in rural Zambia. Addressing this complex issue, then, requires a
multi-faceted and multi-industry approach. That is precisely what the RAIN project, an initiative
headed by Concern Worldwide, aims to do through an intervention focused on empowering rural
smallholder families through agriculture and nutrition education to improve feeding practices and
ultimately prevent malnutrition in the form of stunting (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). As
discussed above, women in Zambia play a vital role in nourishing families and it is therefore
imperative to focus on them in working to improve nutrition. The ultimate goal of the five-year
project (running from 2011-2015) is to develop a sustainable, successful model for improving
nutrition through empowering women in agriculture that can be scaled-up and replicated in other
regions of Zambia and in other countries (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a).
The RAIN project was implemented in four wards of Zambia’s Mumbwa district, Central province
with two similar wards (outside of but adjacent to Mumbwa) selected as controls for comparison. A
total of 3 480 households with children under the age of two and/or pregnant women
(approximately 20 500 people) were selected for inclusion. Priority was given to extremely poor
households. Of the people in the intervention area, half were assigned to receive health and
agricultural programs, while the other half were assigned to receive agricultural programs alone
(Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a).
The RAIN project is multi-faceted, with several unique yet complementary components aligned to
ultimately meet the common goal of improving nutrition. The most obvious component,
agriculture, involves small-scale gardening of vegetables and fruits along with small-animal
husbandry (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Groups of 15-20 women at a time are trained
in nutrition and farming by community health workers and smallholder model farmers (SMFs;
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usually women), respectively. Inputs such as seed and fertilizers are provided at the beginning of
the program which farmers use to generate their own outputs, forming a hub of production with
linkages to markets facilitated as production increases (although the first priority is household
consumption) (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a).
Another component is nutrition and health activities working together to improve infant and young
child feeding practices. The emphasis is on a child’s first 1000 days (from conception until their
second birthday), and volunteers from the community are trained in nutrition and healthy meal
preparation to provide support to mothers in their villages. Linkages are also made to the
healthcare system (including helping reduce mother-to-child HIV transmission) (CONCERN
Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Women’s empowerment activities are also included in the RAIN
project based on a needs assessment conducted by Women for Chang (CONCERN Worldwide and
IFPRI, 2011a), although no details of this component were accessible.
Stakeholder Involvement and Interactions
One of the most innovative elements of this program is that although traditionally nutrition issues
such as stunting are addressed separately by different sectors with different methods and agendas,
RAIN takes a multi-sectoral approach, recognizing the complexity of malnutrition. RAIN was
designed by Concern Worldwide and The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), with
Concern leading the implementation along with Zambian partners, and IFPRI playing the role of
technical support and evaluation (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). It is not just run through
health or agriculture alone, but is a partnership seeking to integrate activities within the Ministry of
Agriculture and the Ministry of Health to achieve more effective and sustainable outcomes
(CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a).
Concern Worldwide is Ireland’s largest international humanitarian agency and focuses on issues of
health, education, livelihood, HIV/AIDS, as well as disaster response. It has been operating for 40
years, aiming to eliminate extreme poverty through partnering with and enabling “the very poorest
people” in 25 of the poorest countries around the world, with a focus on gender equality. Their
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philosophy is aligned with the best practices of using local knowledge, resources, and opportunities
for self-development to help transform lives; in this way, Concern’s work is quite different from
much global health work in the past which has sought to use non-local (often Westernized) ideas
and models for intervention. They also aim to influence local, national, and international policies for
the reduction of extreme poverty (Concern Worldwide, n.d.)
The IFPRI joined the RAIN project in an impact assessment and evaluation capacity (Concern
Worldwide, n.d.). Founded in 1975, IFPRI is a group of researchers collaborating with practitioners,
policymakers, NGO’s, and the private sector to provide country-specific evidence for developing
sustainable research-based policy solutions to end hunger and malnutrition. Some of IFPRI’s priority
areas include sustainable food production, promoting healthy food systems, and transforming
agriculture, incorporating a gender theme cutting across all areas. IFPRI is a member of the CGIAR
Consortium, a global food security research group (IFPRI, n.d.).
A major funder of the RAIN project is the Kerry Group which has donated 1.25 million of the overall
RAIN budget of 3.7 million Euros. The Kerry Group is an international food ingredients company
based in Ireland with divisions in agribusiness, product development, and marketing. As a part of its
sustainability program, Kerry Group supports sustainable development, committing to partnering
with international organizations to help alleviate hunger in developing countries (Kerry Group, n.d.).
Concern has worked with Kerry Group in the past – most notably in 2007 by launching a review the
effectiveness of food assistance programs among those affected by HIV in Uganda and Zambia
(Concern Worldwide, n.d.). Additional funders of the RAIN project include Irish Aid, the Irish
government’s program for overseas development as a part of their foreign policy in fighting global
poverty, along with the Bank of Ireland (Irish Aid, n.d.). There is no indication that these funding
partners had input into the design of RAIN or had conditions attached to their donations. If they
did, however, it could call into question some of the motives behind the interventions, particularly
if modifications were made at the request of a for-profit organization such as Kerry Group.
In order to facilitate sustainability and local ownership of this project, RAIN has several
implementing partners in Zambia, although their specific roles and contributions to the project are
not outlined in any reasonably accessible information. First, a natural fit – the Ministry of
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Agriculture and Livestock (MAL) is a partner working at the national, regional, and community levels
with a vision to promote development the agricultural sector in a way that is efficient, sustainable,
and which assures food security (Harris and Drimie, 2012). MAL advocates a food-based approach
to improving nutrition and rural livelihoods, although their main focus is on cereal crops with
limited vegetable production. This arm of government provides extension services by educating
farmers on storage and preservation methods as well as nutrition (Harris and Drimie, 2012;
CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a).
Another government-level partner is the Ministry of Health (MOH) which participates in the RAIN
project through their National Food and Nutrition Commission (NFNC), mandated by parliament in
1967 to advise government on matters concerning food and nutrition. NCFC’s mission is to provide
leadership on these matters in order to achieve optimal nutrition status of the people of Zambia
(NFNC, 2015). The MAL and the MOH are ideal stakeholders in the RAIN project because potential
exists (pending significant evaluation results) to use the RAIN model to organize future government
strategies and funds. Also, because there is currently minimal coordination between agriculture and
health sectors in Zambia when it comes to nutrition (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2012), having
them linked through this project could facilitate longer-term collaboration.
At the community level, RAIN partners with the NGO Women for Change, whose mandate is to
build community capacities in rural areas especially among women and children, and ultimately to
achieve sustainable development and eradicate poverty. Women for Change collaborates with civic,
political, and other organizations to advocate for improvements in law and policies for the
promotion of women’s rights. Most importantly, Women for Change views traditional leaders as
key players and works with them to increase involvement in governance and bring about changes in
behavior and attitudes in the country (Zambia Land Alliance, 2015). A description of the role of this
NGO in the RAIN project could not be found. It would be beneficial to see Women for Change given
significant opportunities for input and collaboration on the RAIN project as they could draw on their
experience and connections within the community, and will also likely continue to operate in
Mumbwa long after the RAIN project has concluded.
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Evaluation and Critical Analysis
The RAIN project has a significant built-in monitoring and evaluation component. The goal is not
only to discover the impact of RAIN on maternal and child nutrition, but also to understand how
this project can be effectively delivered in other regions after gaining an understanding of the
critical pathways to impact (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). The outcomes of the project
will be measured by comparing the impact of the two intervention groups (agriculture-and-health
versus agriculture-only) on stunting among children two years and older. A baseline survey was
conducted in June-August 2011, and will be compared with results collected in the same season in
2015. The survey captures such data as child health, child nutrition, infant feeding practices, dietary
diversity, and use of available agriculture services (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b).
Primary evaluation outcomes include achieving program implementation; for example,
establishment of smallholder farms and women’s groups, and having agriculture and health training
conducted. Other outcomes are focused on developing relationships between farmers and markets,
production of and year-round access to diversified plant and animal food sources at the household
level, and improved practices of infant feeding and gender equality. These outcomes are predicted
to lead to increased household food security, greater decision-making power for women, and
improved nutrition status of women and children. The ultimate desired outcome is one of improved
policies to reduce the prevalence of undernutrition (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a).
As with any research or intervention design there is room for improvement. The RAIN project
methodology indicates that the poorest households in Mumbwa were selected for intervention
groups, but there is no specific inclusion criteria listed. Not knowing who was doing the choosing or
how it was done leaves the reader questioning if there may have been some selection bias. For
example, it is possible that selection favored families who were already open to the idea of gender
equality, who already had begun crop diversification, or who had more social linkages or support in
the community.
Assuming the evaluation results demonstrate that the RAIN model is successful and there is
sufficient support to replicate it in other areas of Zambia, continuous relationships with the
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Zambian government could be maintained provided Zambian ownership is strategically increased.
However, there is no outlined plan for continued engagement across sectors within the Zambian
government, particularly if the project is not scaled up. Another unclear element is how progress
will be sustained among the people of Mumbwa district and how they will continue being
supported once the final evaluation data is collected and the project concludes later in 2015.
Stripping away assumptions is important in any critical analysis, and in this case there exists a
question of whether empowerment in agriculture necessarily translates into a better life for women
and children. There is a complex interplay of influences that may be at work but have not been
captured in this intervention. As an example, one potential problem with investing in women’s
agriculture, as Kent and MacRae (2010) point out, is that it may be inadvertently discouraging their
pursuit of opportunities to be successful in livelihoods outside of farming.
Research is being done to explore these relationships. The “Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture
Index” (WEAI), developed in by IFPRI, Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative, and
USAID’s Feed the Future, is a survey-based tool tracking the dimensions of production, resources,
income, leadership, and time for the purpose of comprehensively measuring women’s
empowerment and inclusion in the agricultural sector in relation to men (IFPRI, 2014b). The Index’s
founders have piloted it in several countries and found that correlation between women’s
empowerment and nutritional outcomes of women and their children are highly context-
dependent.
In Nepal, for example, the results of WEAI show that women’s autonomy in production is associated
with dietary diversity as well as children’s nutrition outcomes. Yet in Ghana, women’s
empowerment in agriculture is more strongly associated with infant and young child feeding
behaviors but only weakly with children’s nutrition status. And in Bangladesh, women’s
empowerment correlated with household dietary diversity, but other things such as parental
education were stronger predictors of child nutritional status. Indeed, often nutritional status is
affected by factors far beyond the woman’s control (IFPRI, 2014b). It would be useful to apply WEAI
to the rural Zambian context, exploring how results align with the RAIN project.
16
Although the RAIN project targets gender equality and women’s empowerment at the household
level, there are also many health-influencing factors at the individual level that it does not
encompass. Long-term education and literacy rates, for example, are low among rural Zambians,
and even worse for women; only about half of females are literate compared with 72% of males
(CIA, 2014). Access to contraceptives, as mentioned above, can have a dramatic impact upon the
health of a woman and her family, as can access to and uptake of health services throughout the
lifespan.
At the community level, prevailing attitudes about gender equality and the rights of women within
society greatly affect a woman’s empowerment. One glaring example here is child marriage. Zambia
has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world, with 42% of girls married before the age
of 18 (UNICEF Global Databases, 2014). This is not only a human rights issue, but also a health issue.
A girl’s well-being is compromised by early pregnancy, interruption of education, and potential
social isolation, all of which have damaging effects on her career opportunities. It must be
examined whether interventions in agriculture and nutrition alone, without simultaneous (and
equally funded) efforts to combat this harmful practice, will meaningfully improve lives in the long
run.
At the domestic level, land allocation and usage laws, public debt, and government capacity all
affect the system in which women live, and therefore affect woman and child health. Government
expenditure on health care and education in Zambia is quite low (CIA, 2014). If long-term,
sustainable improvements are to be made in the rates of stunting among Zambian children, so too
do long-term, sustainable changes need to be made in the spending patterns and priorities of
governments. Admittedly, this is anything but a straightforward path, but one that must be traveled
if poverty and malnutrition are to be addressed and eventually eliminated.
Moving to the global level, although this project is exceptionally well-planned and carefully
constructed to avoid some of the common pitfalls of international development work in nutrition
(such as mono-sectored leadership, short-sightedness, and imposing solutions upon others), it is
impossible to ignore the fact that the project seems to be entirely designed by and funded through
non-Zambian parties. While consultation with national stakeholders did take place, it is likely that
17
ownership and sustainability of this project could be improved with a greater amount of input and
staffing from local leadership. The issue of data accessibility and ownership also arises here. If this
project and attached data is protectively ‘owned’ by funders, the people of Mumbwa and future
Zambian researchers may not have direct, open access to it for the further benefit of the Zambian
people.
Finally, the superordinate level. Aside from natural endowments which cannot be altered, some
issues at this level must be addressed along with the targeting of nutrition outcomes. Poverty and
the burden of HIV/AIDS are examples; improving agriculture and feeding behaviors can only go so
far without their simultaneous reduction. Zambia’s skewed age-demographic structure, on the
other hand, is a superordinate factor that is not directly alterable through interventions, but will
gradually improve and resolve as Zambia moves towards development. Such long-term
improvements will depend upon projects like RAIN to build upon each other and, like links in a
chain, each contribute to a whole that is greater than the sum of the parts.
Conclusion
Overall, there is a myriad physical, behavioral, socio-cultural, political, and historical factors that
interact to contribute to the high rates of stunting in Zambia. The RAIN project is an innovative
intervention targeting malnutrition which holds potential for great impact, and results of this study
could indeed set a new standard for intersectoral collaboration when targeting malnutrition in
similar contexts. The designers of the RAIN project have made an extensive effort to learn from the
shortfalls of traditional nutrition interventions and have developed strong evaluation
methodologies for this project. While there remains some questions about sustainability once the
project is completed, the work done to enhance the status and abilities of women in agriculture are
valuable. Conceivably this project will translate into a replicable model for nutrition-with-
agriculture interventions that can be scaled up for long-lasting health, social, and political impacts.
18
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V_Young Global Public Health Assignment 3

  • 1. 1 An Analysis of Malnutrition in Rural Zambia and the “Realigning Agriculture to Improve Nutrition” (RAIN) Project Vanessa Young - 1001616655 GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH CHL 5700H Assignment #3 Submitted to Suzanne Jackson April 4, 2014 Introduction Zambia is a beautiful country in southern Africa with a thriving agricultural industry; however, beneath the plentiful harvest lies a hidden story of malnutrition. That is why Concern Worldwide has developed an intervention which integrates agriculture, nutrition, and women’s empowerment with the aim of reducing the harmful effects of stunting in children in rural Zambia. A secondary yet ambitious goal is to identify a replicable pathway to success which can be scaled up for countries around the world (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). This paper will first discuss malnutrition in Zambia as viewed through the Labonte and Torgerson (2005) framework of globalization and health. Next, the RAIN project will be summarized, and its stakeholder relationships and evaluation plan will be described and critically analyzed. Zambia’s Malnutrition within a Global Health Framework A person’s health – and, by extension, their nutrition – does not develop in isolation; it is affected by a web of interacting factors at the household, community, domestic, global, and superordinate levels. A global framework such as that of Labonte and Torgerson (2005) helps to delineate these influences and demonstrate how they interact to produce health outcomes. For this paper, the health outcome of focus is stunted growth directly caused by malnutrition among the people in Mumbwa district, Central province, Zambia. Health outcomes Malnutrition triggers a third of all child deaths globally each year (UNICEF, 2013). Not only does this cause physical damage, but its ripple effects extend also into the mental and social realms, affecting individuals and societies alike. Poorly nourished people develop poor health and work performance, and in this way malnutrition drains national resources while undermining investments in education and health (FAO, 2004). Nutritional well-being of a population is of utmost importance – and indeed
  • 2. 2 a precondition – for any nation's development while simultaneously reflecting the efficiency of national resource allocation (FAO, 2004). The consequences exist not only in the present but, indeed, can extend for generations. A large proportion of Zambia’s population suffers from the effects of malnutrition. Current measures indicate that 45% of children are moderately or severely stunted, although wasting affects only 5% of children (UNICEF, 2014) – the causes of which often begin long before the child is even born. Mothers who received poor nutrition during pre-conception, pregnancy, and lactation are more likely to have children who are stunted, have developmental problems and weaker immune systems. These disadvantages translate into overall higher mortality rates and therefore unreached potential and economic losses on a macro level (WHO, 2013). Also, undernutrition and other health conditions have reciprocally-influential relationships. For example, tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV can both bring about, and be precipitated by, malnutrition (UNICEF, 2013). Currently in Zambia, 11% percent of babies are born underweight (UNICEF, 2014), indicating maternal malnutrition. Stunting is a form of chronic malnutrition which occurs over time, caused by poor food quality, poor feeding practices, and/or frequent infections, leaving children short for their age (UNICEF, 2009). It can also result in diminished cognitive and physical development leading to poor performance in school and reduced productivity as adults, resulting in lower earnings. Furthermore, children who experience stunting are subject to higher risk of infections and disease compared with those who were not stunted (UNICEF, 2013). Stunting is of particular concern among younger children because once a child reaches the age of two, it is largely irreversible (WHO, 2013) and its lasting effects put children at a disadvantage for the rest of their lives. Tackling undernutrition has a wider scope than just trying to reduce an indicator such as stunting. Adequately addressing this issue improves communities, restores potential, and breaks this damaging, destructive cycle. Household Contexts At the household level in Zambia, several factors such as dietary patterns, infant feeding practices, and the role of women influence nutrition outcomes. One of the biggest nutritional needs in this
  • 3. 3 area is dietary diversity. Although agriculture is the dominant industry, there is little variety in commodities; maize and cotton account for the majority of farmland. Naturally, this affects what is consumed at the household level and therefore has repercussions for nutritional status. A baseline survey for the RAIN project conducted in 2011 captured current eating patterns and showed that although almost no households experienced hunger, diets were monotonous overall and dominated by maize. Only about half of households had consumed iron-rich food such as meat, fish, poultry, or eggs within the past month (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b). These results highlight the fact that while there is generally enough food in rural Zambia (i.e., people have access to sufficient amounts of calories), there is a lack of dietary variety which leads to micronutrient deficiencies. The same baseline survey also recorded feeding practices in Mumbwa district. Virtually all infants were breastfed until 8 months, and many into their second year. However, exclusive breastfeeding was rare and low-diversity complementary foods along with water began to displace breastmilk for many as early as a couple months of age (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b). Such practices can be detrimental to the proper growth of a child which is why the WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding to 6 months (and continued breastfeeding with appropriate complementary feeding until the age of 2 and beyond) (WHO, 2015). Although there is an assumption that harmful practices in infant feeding such as these which contribute to stunting can be modified through education, data from the RAIN study suggests there is a more complex situation. According to the baseline survey, although a majority of mothers knew what they should be feeding their children, inability to access the right foods and competing time demands between caring for children and agricultural work made the implementation of this knowledge difficult (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b). Many of the nutrition-influencing determinants at the household level are tied to traditional gender roles. In rural Zambia – and many other African and Asian countries – in addition to being responsible for producing food for their families, women carry out a significant amount of daily domestic labor and often engage in piece-work to help make ends meet (Kent and MacRae, 2010). Taking care of children is also an added constraint on time; these responsibilities all compete with and reduce the amount of work that can be achieved on the family farm (Kent and MacRae, 2010). One Zambian woman, in an interview on this topic explained this daily struggle: “The problem is
  • 4. 4 that I cannot cultivate a big portion of land [because]… I have to do piecework so I can feed my family. I don’t eat enough so I don’t have enough energy for my land” (Kent and MacRae, 2010). It is not difficult to see the relationships between women’s work, food, and nutrition. Women play the role of both food producers and food providers at the household level therefore addressing their needs is critical in addressing food insecurity (Kent and MacRae, 2010). Traditional gender roles heavily affect household operation in Zambia, even influencing food allocation patterns. Women – even if pregnant – prioritize the food needs of men and children above their own. In taking smaller meals for herself, the woman’s nutrition status is hindered (particularly when food is scarce), which in turn reduces the energy the woman has to spend on cultivating crops (Kent and MacRae, 2010). Access to contraceptives, another gendered determinant of health among Zambian women, is 41% (UNICEF, 2014). The resulting fertility rate is 5.7 births per woman (UNICEF, 2014) which translates into a large number of dependants for each woman to feed, and a significant amount of time spent being pregnant, breastfeeding, and caring for infants. Consequently, time spent cultivating food is further reduced. This may explain why female heads of households cultivate smaller pieces of land compared to male heads of households (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014b), and earn less than half than that of males as measured by average per capita income among smallholder households (Sitko, 2014). Community and Domestic Contexts As community and domestic influences affecting nutritional outcomes in rural Zambia are intertwined, they will be discussed here together. Zambia, a former British colony named Northern Rhodesia, has been one of the most politically stable countries in southern Africa since gaining independence in 1964 (Irish Aid, n.d.). The largest catalyst for its economic development has been in mining its large reserves of high-quality copper (CIA, 2014; SCIAF, 2007), although as in many industries, heavy reliance upon natural resources comes with both a blessing and a curse. In the case of mining, the migration of labor to meet industry demand (both within Zambia and throughout southern Africa) has resulted in high urbanization and a weak rural lobby (Scott, 2002). As for agriculture, several issues will be highlighted below.
  • 5. 5 Although droughts, fluctuating copper prices, and business corruption have been obstacles to development, Zambia’s economy has grown at a rate of more than 6% GDP per year since 2005 (some reasons for this will be expanded upon later). Economic growth in Zambia, however, is not translating into poverty reduction. According to Mofya-Mukuka (2014a), for every 1% increase in per capita GDP, the associated decline in rural poverty is a mere 0.25%. One reason for this is that residents in rural areas rely heavily on agriculture for their livelihoods, yet there are market- distorting agricultural policies hindering economic growth (CIA, 2014) which will be discussed shortly. Agriculture is a mainstay for a large segment of Zambian population, constituting 85% of the labor force (CIA, 2014). Almost two thirds of the nation’s land is held by smallholder farmer families who work to produce crops via low-technology rain-fed hoe cultivation (IFPRI, 2014a). Zambia’s small- scale farmers have long depended on seed and fertilizer subsidies to produce maize. In the 1970’s and 80’s, several innovations to improve the maize seed in Zambia were put in place in which state- owned companies sold improved seed and fertilizer at reduced prices. This system and accompanying government subsidies were later dismantled however, due to their fiscal burden along with pressure from the International Monetary Fund as a part of structural adjustment programs (SAPs) in the late 80s and early 90s (Smale and Birol, 2013). Later, concerns over food security led to the reinstatement of farming subsidies in 2002 in the form of the Farmer Input Support Program (FISP). The FISP is an initiative of the Zambian government as a part of the poverty reduction strategy to reach food production goals (Burke, Jayne, and Sitko, 2012). The FISP provides seeds and fertilizers to farmers at heavily subsidized prices, accounting for approximately three quarters of the Zambian government’s current agricultural budget (Burke, Jayne, and Sitko, 2012). These subsidies remain controversial, though (Smale and Birol, 2013); the FISP has been criticized for concurrently setting the goal of increasing total national maize production to help keep up with urban consumption. This results in larger (wealthier) farm owners receiving more of the benefits since they are thought to produce more marketable surplus than smaller farms (Burke, Jayne, and Sitko, 2012; Mason, Jayne, and Mofya-Mukuka, 2013). As there is little benefit for the rural poor, the FISP therefore has minimal impact on poverty reduction (Mofya- Mukuka, 2014a).
  • 6. 6 There is another strike against the rural farmer. Due to more than half of Zambia’s land being covered by water or allocated as national parks, game management areas, and commercial farmland (Natural Resources Consultative Forum, 2008; Zambia Tourism, 2015), many smallholder farms are constrained. A quarter of households in Central province have less than half an hectare of land to cultivate, and an average of 50% of smallholders say there’s no land available to expand (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a; Scott, 2002). This constraint is not unrelated to the fact that 78% of smallholder farming households live below the $1.25 per person per day poverty line (Mason, Jayne, and Mofya-Mukuka, 2013). Another topic of relevance to this project is the gendered organizing of farming in Zambia. Land allocation practices, as influenced by post-colonial development in which large areas were declared as state land, favored men. In other areas however, where fishing was a main industry, women took the dominant role in agriculture since fishing was seen as a male activity (Meinzen-Dick et al., 2012). Gender inequality proves to be a deeply-entrenched barrier in Zambian society, however, as women face difficulties in obtaining external services and support for agriculture (Kent and MacRae, 2010). Men outnumber women 2:1 for receiving assistance from the Fertiliser Support Programme (Republic of Zambia, 2011a), for example, despite women carrying out the majority of physical labor on smallholder farms. Despite these challenges, the Zambian government has shown consistent commitment to addressing malnutrition. In 1967 the National Food and Nutrition Act mandated the newly- established National Food and Nutrition Commission (NFNC, within the Ministry of Health) to promote food and nutrition activities and advise the government on these issues (Harris and Drimie, 2012). More recently, the government, realizing the value of crop diversification for its beneficial impacts on food security, has begun to promote high-nutrient crops (IFPRI, 2014a; Mofya-Mukuka, 2014b). In 2004 following several droughts, the Zambian Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives implemented a program for this purpose. Moving away from maize-only farming towards incorporating other options such as cassava, cashews, soy beans, sunflowers, and sweet potatoes could improve food security and nutrition status of smallholder household by not only mitigating the risks of weather-, pest-, or disease- induced failure of mono-crops, but also providing variety in diets (IFPRI, 2014a).
  • 7. 7 And finally, the 2010 joining of Zambia with the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) initiative (SUN, 2014) also demonstrates a renewed commitment to nutrition in the government agenda. While there are many improvements to be made, (programs remain underfunded and more intersectoral consensus must be reached (Taylor, 2012)), the momentum built from Zambia’s involvement in SUN makes the RAIN project a less foreign ideas to the Zambian government. And just as the sun and rain are a winning combination for successful agriculture, so these projects can work in tandem, building synergy to ultimately to rid the country of food insecurity. Global Contexts At the global level, international market fluctuations, the signing of treaties, and donor aid with stipulated conditions have in various ways influenced the Zambian economy, government spending patterns, and individual economic access to food. To begin, world events such as the global financial crisis, geopolitical conflicts, or natural disasters (particularly in oil-producing countries) can influence international markets (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). As Zambia’s national budget depends significantly upon donor support, downturns in the global economy can have detrimental effects through public sector job losses and cuts in public services (Masiye, Chama, Chitah, and Jonsson, 2010). This affects not only the national economy, but trickles down to the individual level as well, tightening family budgets and worsening poverty. International food commodity market prices are also subject to volatility and directly impact food prices at the local level. Considering that two thirds of household income is spent on food in developing countries, higher global food prices over the past few years have measurably reduced the purchasing power of the average Zambian (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). Also, when commodity prices are high, investors’ risk tolerance decreases. In Zambia over the past two decades, almost two thirds of the international grain trading companies exited the country, citing unpredictability of the Zambian government as a main reason (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). Global trade, while often economically beneficial, is certainly not a static construct and can worsen food insecurity at times.
  • 8. 8 International cooperation can also have beneficial effects. The 54-country African Union (of which Zambia is a member) recently made a commitment to the Malabo Declaration which aims to triple intra-African agricultural trade and end hunger by 2025. One of the actionable pledges in the declaration is for each government to allot at least 10% of their public expenditure to agriculture (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a). While this is no doubt easier for some countries to achieve than others, the solidarity in action is certainly a source of momentum upon which individual countries such as Zambia can build. Other actions at the national level will be discussed later. Economic reform in Zambia begun in 1983 with a structural adjustment package supported by the IMF and World Bank (OSDBA, 1996). The goal of the SAP in Zambia was to transform economic policies and correct imbalances caused by “economic mismanagement and … misguided development strategies” (OSDBA, 1996); significant changes were made in a number of sectors. Progress was seen in agriculture by liberalizing production and trade which ultimately led to improvements in exchange and interest rates (OSDBA, 1996). However, the corresponding reduction of spending on public services such as health, education, and water sanitation in the decade that followed caused living conditions in Zambia to deteriorate (Masiye, Chama, Chitah, and Jonsson, 2010). It became clear that the SAP was a donor-driven reformulation of spending which came with conditionalities not controlled by the Zambian government, and therefore not appropriate in the local context. Any benefit to Zambian citizens certainly didn’t extend to rural communities or the poor in general (Scott, 2002). A discussion of global-level influences in Zambia would not be complete without including the international pressure placed on the Zambian government to privatize copper mines in the 90’s (CIA, 2014). Opinions are divided over its benefit despite the fact that copper mining currently comprises 70% of total export earnings (Irish Aid, n.d.). Some see privatization as having spurred economic growth through increased foreign investment which boosted copper output; others see privatization as having undermined development. The government’s decision was largely swayed by the World Bank and IMF which repeatedly attached privatization as a condition to several loan and debt-relief packages (SCIAF, 2007). While there were clear benefits such as profits channeled back to the government through taxation, the revenue has been relatively small (about a 3% royalty rate) compared to that generated by private mines in other resource-rich countries (as high as 10-30%)
  • 9. 9 (SCIAF, 2007). In a country with such high levels of poverty and malnutrition, this missed income from Zambian-owned resources could have been spent on social services, infrastructure, and health care to improve the standard of living and nutrition. Superordinate Contexts Zambia is a landlocked country naturally endowed with vast amounts of fertile land, water, and a favorable climate for agricultural production (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a), although sometimes prone to flash flooding and prolonged droughts (Caracciolo, Depalo, and Macias, 2014). Maize is one of the country’s top agricultural exports (along with sugar, tobacco, and cotton) and a ubiquitous dietary staple (FAO, 2011). Zambia has a rapidly-growing population of 14.5 million (WHO, 2014; World Bank, 2015), with about 60% of its residents living in rural areas (CIA, 2014). The Mumbwa district, about 150km west of Lusaka, Zambia’s capital, constitutes 25% of Central province and contains a reported population of 218,328 (Republic of Zambia, 2011b). In 2010, the population growth rate in Central province was 2.3%, and even greater at 3.2% in Mumbwa district (Republic of Zambia, 2011b). Population growth presents food supply challenges on top of the fact that much of Zambia still struggles under the weight of poverty. In 2010, over 80% of the rural population was living on less than $1/day (WHO, 2014; Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a). Poverty and hunger are inextricably linked as each worsens the other (their combination into one Millennium Development Goal may be seen to signify their close relationship (United Nations, 2014)). Additionally there is a heavy HIV/AIDS burden (Mofya-Mukuka, 2014a) in Zambia with a prevalence rate of 12.5% among those 15-49 years of age (UNAIDS, 2013). The burden of this disease not only affects those suffering from it (being both a contributing cause and indirect effect of malnutrition), but a high prevalence of HIV/AIDS also influences food insecurity by reducing productivity across sectors – including public administration – and therefore brings damaging socio-economic effects (Scott, 2002). The quality and duration of the average life becomes significantly diminished; life expectancy at 55 for females and 58 for males, resulting in almost half the population being under the age of 15, and 90% under the age of 45 (UNICEF, 2014; Republic of Zambia, 2014). This bottom- heavy population pyramid means a smaller number of working adults are supporting a larger
  • 10. 10 number of dependents and, unfortunately, is one of the reasons that 28% of Zambian children are involved in child labor, mostly in agriculture (United States Department of Labor, 2013). RAIN Project Summary From household to superordinate levels, the influencers described above interact to produce an unfortunate recipe for malnutrition in rural Zambia. Addressing this complex issue, then, requires a multi-faceted and multi-industry approach. That is precisely what the RAIN project, an initiative headed by Concern Worldwide, aims to do through an intervention focused on empowering rural smallholder families through agriculture and nutrition education to improve feeding practices and ultimately prevent malnutrition in the form of stunting (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). As discussed above, women in Zambia play a vital role in nourishing families and it is therefore imperative to focus on them in working to improve nutrition. The ultimate goal of the five-year project (running from 2011-2015) is to develop a sustainable, successful model for improving nutrition through empowering women in agriculture that can be scaled-up and replicated in other regions of Zambia and in other countries (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). The RAIN project was implemented in four wards of Zambia’s Mumbwa district, Central province with two similar wards (outside of but adjacent to Mumbwa) selected as controls for comparison. A total of 3 480 households with children under the age of two and/or pregnant women (approximately 20 500 people) were selected for inclusion. Priority was given to extremely poor households. Of the people in the intervention area, half were assigned to receive health and agricultural programs, while the other half were assigned to receive agricultural programs alone (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). The RAIN project is multi-faceted, with several unique yet complementary components aligned to ultimately meet the common goal of improving nutrition. The most obvious component, agriculture, involves small-scale gardening of vegetables and fruits along with small-animal husbandry (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Groups of 15-20 women at a time are trained in nutrition and farming by community health workers and smallholder model farmers (SMFs;
  • 11. 11 usually women), respectively. Inputs such as seed and fertilizers are provided at the beginning of the program which farmers use to generate their own outputs, forming a hub of production with linkages to markets facilitated as production increases (although the first priority is household consumption) (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Another component is nutrition and health activities working together to improve infant and young child feeding practices. The emphasis is on a child’s first 1000 days (from conception until their second birthday), and volunteers from the community are trained in nutrition and healthy meal preparation to provide support to mothers in their villages. Linkages are also made to the healthcare system (including helping reduce mother-to-child HIV transmission) (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Women’s empowerment activities are also included in the RAIN project based on a needs assessment conducted by Women for Chang (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a), although no details of this component were accessible. Stakeholder Involvement and Interactions One of the most innovative elements of this program is that although traditionally nutrition issues such as stunting are addressed separately by different sectors with different methods and agendas, RAIN takes a multi-sectoral approach, recognizing the complexity of malnutrition. RAIN was designed by Concern Worldwide and The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), with Concern leading the implementation along with Zambian partners, and IFPRI playing the role of technical support and evaluation (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). It is not just run through health or agriculture alone, but is a partnership seeking to integrate activities within the Ministry of Agriculture and the Ministry of Health to achieve more effective and sustainable outcomes (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Concern Worldwide is Ireland’s largest international humanitarian agency and focuses on issues of health, education, livelihood, HIV/AIDS, as well as disaster response. It has been operating for 40 years, aiming to eliminate extreme poverty through partnering with and enabling “the very poorest people” in 25 of the poorest countries around the world, with a focus on gender equality. Their
  • 12. 12 philosophy is aligned with the best practices of using local knowledge, resources, and opportunities for self-development to help transform lives; in this way, Concern’s work is quite different from much global health work in the past which has sought to use non-local (often Westernized) ideas and models for intervention. They also aim to influence local, national, and international policies for the reduction of extreme poverty (Concern Worldwide, n.d.) The IFPRI joined the RAIN project in an impact assessment and evaluation capacity (Concern Worldwide, n.d.). Founded in 1975, IFPRI is a group of researchers collaborating with practitioners, policymakers, NGO’s, and the private sector to provide country-specific evidence for developing sustainable research-based policy solutions to end hunger and malnutrition. Some of IFPRI’s priority areas include sustainable food production, promoting healthy food systems, and transforming agriculture, incorporating a gender theme cutting across all areas. IFPRI is a member of the CGIAR Consortium, a global food security research group (IFPRI, n.d.). A major funder of the RAIN project is the Kerry Group which has donated 1.25 million of the overall RAIN budget of 3.7 million Euros. The Kerry Group is an international food ingredients company based in Ireland with divisions in agribusiness, product development, and marketing. As a part of its sustainability program, Kerry Group supports sustainable development, committing to partnering with international organizations to help alleviate hunger in developing countries (Kerry Group, n.d.). Concern has worked with Kerry Group in the past – most notably in 2007 by launching a review the effectiveness of food assistance programs among those affected by HIV in Uganda and Zambia (Concern Worldwide, n.d.). Additional funders of the RAIN project include Irish Aid, the Irish government’s program for overseas development as a part of their foreign policy in fighting global poverty, along with the Bank of Ireland (Irish Aid, n.d.). There is no indication that these funding partners had input into the design of RAIN or had conditions attached to their donations. If they did, however, it could call into question some of the motives behind the interventions, particularly if modifications were made at the request of a for-profit organization such as Kerry Group. In order to facilitate sustainability and local ownership of this project, RAIN has several implementing partners in Zambia, although their specific roles and contributions to the project are not outlined in any reasonably accessible information. First, a natural fit – the Ministry of
  • 13. 13 Agriculture and Livestock (MAL) is a partner working at the national, regional, and community levels with a vision to promote development the agricultural sector in a way that is efficient, sustainable, and which assures food security (Harris and Drimie, 2012). MAL advocates a food-based approach to improving nutrition and rural livelihoods, although their main focus is on cereal crops with limited vegetable production. This arm of government provides extension services by educating farmers on storage and preservation methods as well as nutrition (Harris and Drimie, 2012; CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). Another government-level partner is the Ministry of Health (MOH) which participates in the RAIN project through their National Food and Nutrition Commission (NFNC), mandated by parliament in 1967 to advise government on matters concerning food and nutrition. NCFC’s mission is to provide leadership on these matters in order to achieve optimal nutrition status of the people of Zambia (NFNC, 2015). The MAL and the MOH are ideal stakeholders in the RAIN project because potential exists (pending significant evaluation results) to use the RAIN model to organize future government strategies and funds. Also, because there is currently minimal coordination between agriculture and health sectors in Zambia when it comes to nutrition (CONCERN Worldwide and IFPRI, 2012), having them linked through this project could facilitate longer-term collaboration. At the community level, RAIN partners with the NGO Women for Change, whose mandate is to build community capacities in rural areas especially among women and children, and ultimately to achieve sustainable development and eradicate poverty. Women for Change collaborates with civic, political, and other organizations to advocate for improvements in law and policies for the promotion of women’s rights. Most importantly, Women for Change views traditional leaders as key players and works with them to increase involvement in governance and bring about changes in behavior and attitudes in the country (Zambia Land Alliance, 2015). A description of the role of this NGO in the RAIN project could not be found. It would be beneficial to see Women for Change given significant opportunities for input and collaboration on the RAIN project as they could draw on their experience and connections within the community, and will also likely continue to operate in Mumbwa long after the RAIN project has concluded.
  • 14. 14 Evaluation and Critical Analysis The RAIN project has a significant built-in monitoring and evaluation component. The goal is not only to discover the impact of RAIN on maternal and child nutrition, but also to understand how this project can be effectively delivered in other regions after gaining an understanding of the critical pathways to impact (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). The outcomes of the project will be measured by comparing the impact of the two intervention groups (agriculture-and-health versus agriculture-only) on stunting among children two years and older. A baseline survey was conducted in June-August 2011, and will be compared with results collected in the same season in 2015. The survey captures such data as child health, child nutrition, infant feeding practices, dietary diversity, and use of available agriculture services (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011b). Primary evaluation outcomes include achieving program implementation; for example, establishment of smallholder farms and women’s groups, and having agriculture and health training conducted. Other outcomes are focused on developing relationships between farmers and markets, production of and year-round access to diversified plant and animal food sources at the household level, and improved practices of infant feeding and gender equality. These outcomes are predicted to lead to increased household food security, greater decision-making power for women, and improved nutrition status of women and children. The ultimate desired outcome is one of improved policies to reduce the prevalence of undernutrition (Concern Worldwide and IFPRI, 2011a). As with any research or intervention design there is room for improvement. The RAIN project methodology indicates that the poorest households in Mumbwa were selected for intervention groups, but there is no specific inclusion criteria listed. Not knowing who was doing the choosing or how it was done leaves the reader questioning if there may have been some selection bias. For example, it is possible that selection favored families who were already open to the idea of gender equality, who already had begun crop diversification, or who had more social linkages or support in the community. Assuming the evaluation results demonstrate that the RAIN model is successful and there is sufficient support to replicate it in other areas of Zambia, continuous relationships with the
  • 15. 15 Zambian government could be maintained provided Zambian ownership is strategically increased. However, there is no outlined plan for continued engagement across sectors within the Zambian government, particularly if the project is not scaled up. Another unclear element is how progress will be sustained among the people of Mumbwa district and how they will continue being supported once the final evaluation data is collected and the project concludes later in 2015. Stripping away assumptions is important in any critical analysis, and in this case there exists a question of whether empowerment in agriculture necessarily translates into a better life for women and children. There is a complex interplay of influences that may be at work but have not been captured in this intervention. As an example, one potential problem with investing in women’s agriculture, as Kent and MacRae (2010) point out, is that it may be inadvertently discouraging their pursuit of opportunities to be successful in livelihoods outside of farming. Research is being done to explore these relationships. The “Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index” (WEAI), developed in by IFPRI, Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative, and USAID’s Feed the Future, is a survey-based tool tracking the dimensions of production, resources, income, leadership, and time for the purpose of comprehensively measuring women’s empowerment and inclusion in the agricultural sector in relation to men (IFPRI, 2014b). The Index’s founders have piloted it in several countries and found that correlation between women’s empowerment and nutritional outcomes of women and their children are highly context- dependent. In Nepal, for example, the results of WEAI show that women’s autonomy in production is associated with dietary diversity as well as children’s nutrition outcomes. Yet in Ghana, women’s empowerment in agriculture is more strongly associated with infant and young child feeding behaviors but only weakly with children’s nutrition status. And in Bangladesh, women’s empowerment correlated with household dietary diversity, but other things such as parental education were stronger predictors of child nutritional status. Indeed, often nutritional status is affected by factors far beyond the woman’s control (IFPRI, 2014b). It would be useful to apply WEAI to the rural Zambian context, exploring how results align with the RAIN project.
  • 16. 16 Although the RAIN project targets gender equality and women’s empowerment at the household level, there are also many health-influencing factors at the individual level that it does not encompass. Long-term education and literacy rates, for example, are low among rural Zambians, and even worse for women; only about half of females are literate compared with 72% of males (CIA, 2014). Access to contraceptives, as mentioned above, can have a dramatic impact upon the health of a woman and her family, as can access to and uptake of health services throughout the lifespan. At the community level, prevailing attitudes about gender equality and the rights of women within society greatly affect a woman’s empowerment. One glaring example here is child marriage. Zambia has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world, with 42% of girls married before the age of 18 (UNICEF Global Databases, 2014). This is not only a human rights issue, but also a health issue. A girl’s well-being is compromised by early pregnancy, interruption of education, and potential social isolation, all of which have damaging effects on her career opportunities. It must be examined whether interventions in agriculture and nutrition alone, without simultaneous (and equally funded) efforts to combat this harmful practice, will meaningfully improve lives in the long run. At the domestic level, land allocation and usage laws, public debt, and government capacity all affect the system in which women live, and therefore affect woman and child health. Government expenditure on health care and education in Zambia is quite low (CIA, 2014). If long-term, sustainable improvements are to be made in the rates of stunting among Zambian children, so too do long-term, sustainable changes need to be made in the spending patterns and priorities of governments. Admittedly, this is anything but a straightforward path, but one that must be traveled if poverty and malnutrition are to be addressed and eventually eliminated. Moving to the global level, although this project is exceptionally well-planned and carefully constructed to avoid some of the common pitfalls of international development work in nutrition (such as mono-sectored leadership, short-sightedness, and imposing solutions upon others), it is impossible to ignore the fact that the project seems to be entirely designed by and funded through non-Zambian parties. While consultation with national stakeholders did take place, it is likely that
  • 17. 17 ownership and sustainability of this project could be improved with a greater amount of input and staffing from local leadership. The issue of data accessibility and ownership also arises here. If this project and attached data is protectively ‘owned’ by funders, the people of Mumbwa and future Zambian researchers may not have direct, open access to it for the further benefit of the Zambian people. Finally, the superordinate level. Aside from natural endowments which cannot be altered, some issues at this level must be addressed along with the targeting of nutrition outcomes. Poverty and the burden of HIV/AIDS are examples; improving agriculture and feeding behaviors can only go so far without their simultaneous reduction. Zambia’s skewed age-demographic structure, on the other hand, is a superordinate factor that is not directly alterable through interventions, but will gradually improve and resolve as Zambia moves towards development. Such long-term improvements will depend upon projects like RAIN to build upon each other and, like links in a chain, each contribute to a whole that is greater than the sum of the parts. Conclusion Overall, there is a myriad physical, behavioral, socio-cultural, political, and historical factors that interact to contribute to the high rates of stunting in Zambia. The RAIN project is an innovative intervention targeting malnutrition which holds potential for great impact, and results of this study could indeed set a new standard for intersectoral collaboration when targeting malnutrition in similar contexts. The designers of the RAIN project have made an extensive effort to learn from the shortfalls of traditional nutrition interventions and have developed strong evaluation methodologies for this project. While there remains some questions about sustainability once the project is completed, the work done to enhance the status and abilities of women in agriculture are valuable. Conceivably this project will translate into a replicable model for nutrition-with- agriculture interventions that can be scaled up for long-lasting health, social, and political impacts.
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