ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1987, this book traces the broad outlines of urban food policy, drawing attention to the limited knowledge of regional social history. Urban food supply systems in Africa have developed very fast, in the midst of societies in which food production was not in general oriented to feeding distant populations of 'specialist consumers'. Institutional and political links had to be forged between town and country if food supply was to be cheap and predictable. This volume explores the political and material dynamics of urban food supply through 4 case studies: Kano, Yaoundé, Dar es Salaam and Harare.

chapter 1|54 pages

Introduction

chapter 4|48 pages

A Century of Food Supply in Dar Es Salaam

From Sumptuous Suppers for the Sultan to Maize Meal for a Million 1

chapter 6|19 pages

Comparative Epilogue