Castro, Amanda Canário de; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6234-2060; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4849915141510013
Resumo:
Introduction: Food insecurity (FI) is characterized by limited access to regular and
adequate food, resulting from insufficient income or other social, economic, and
structural determinants that compromise the realization of the Human Right to
Adequate Food (HRtAF), whose impacts vary between regions, urban and rural
areas. The Northeast region recorded the second highest rate of severe FI, and in
Bahia, an inverse pattern to the national one was observed: higher prevalence in
urban areas (14.1%) than in rural areas (9.9%). Objective: To analyze public and
civil society actions with the potential to impact the prevalence of FI, especially in its
severe form, in the rural population of the state of Bahia. Methodology:
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with public and civil society advisors
from the Food and Nutrition Security Council (Consea) in the state of Bahia, and
with key figures from organized social movements and/or public officials indicated
due to their work related to food and nutrition security actions in rural areas. The
organizational, development, and content analysis phases of the interviews were
guided by Bardin's (1977) assumptions, as a way to systematize and analyze the data.
Results: The analysis of the interviews resulted in two central categories, namely:
"Between data and discourses: ambivalence of meanings about actions surrounding
Food Security," which indicated that the lower food insecurity in rural Bahia is due
to the continuity of rural development policies and support for family farming; and
the second category, "Claiming, influencing, and cooperating: aspects relevant to
civil society in strengthening Food Security actions in the rural area of the state of
Bahia," which expressed the leading role of organized civil society, especially family
farmers, in the construction, monitoring, and implementation of actions aimed at
guaranteeing food and nutrition security. Conclusion: A reality of punctual advances
and persistent challenges in addressing food insecurity in rural Bahia was evidenced,
marked by resource limitations, fragility, and discontinuity of public policies.
Conversely, the leading role of civil society, especially family farmers, in promoting
food and nutrition security stands out, revealing that the paths to reducing food
insecurity depend on the interaction between effective public policies and social
mobilization, with a need to expand the continuity and reach of actions through
participatory and territorially sensitive governance.