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Consumption practices in transition: Rural-urban migration and the food fish system in Myanmar
•Social practices and food systems are complementary concepts to comprehend food transitions.•Macro food transitions are made up of variegated micro- and meso-scale processes of change.•Consumption practices travel across space and reconfigure in response to the contexts.•Urban fish consumption and...
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Published in: | Geoforum 2021-12, Vol.127, p.33-45 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Social practices and food systems are complementary concepts to comprehend food transitions.•Macro food transitions are made up of variegated micro- and meso-scale processes of change.•Consumption practices travel across space and reconfigure in response to the contexts.•Urban fish consumption and farmed fish production are driving one another in Asia.•Dietary changes in Asia is more gradual than assumed in food modernization narratives.
This article explores the reconfigurations of fish consumption practices in Myanmar in a context of rapid urbanization and changing availability of wild and farmed fish. Using a social practice lens, we analyze how everyday fish consumption practices change as people move from the rural Ayeyarwady Delta to Yangon city. We show how these reconfigurations are shaped by new routines in urban areas and the transition from capture fisheries to aquaculture. Our analysis reveals a growing detachment of consumers from production processes but, at the same time, a continuity in their everyday food routines through the upholding of “mother’s traditional cuisine”, and a general drive to preserve commensality. We demonstrate the value of using a social practices lens integrating micro- and meso-scale socio-cultural processes to understand dietary change by examining how rural-urban migration influence the sourcing, cooking, and eating of wild and farmed fish. These insights have implications for the everyday geography of consumption, including the persistence of socio-culturally appropriate food practices and the hybridisation of rural-urban food environments. As such, social practice approaches to the study of food consumption open up a means of understanding and even steering complex food system transitions in dynamically changing regions such as Southeast Asia. |
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ISSN: | 0016-7185 1872-9398 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.09.013 |