International Journal of Food Properties (Dec 2022)

Food security and agricultural challenges in West-African rural communities: a machine learning analysis

  • Jaehyun Ahn,
  • Gary Briers,
  • Mathew Baker,
  • Edwin Price,
  • Dagbegnon Clement Sohoulande Djebou,
  • Robert Strong,
  • Manuel Piña,
  • Shahriar Kibriya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/10942912.2022.2066124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
pp. 827 – 844

Abstract

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This article investigated household-level food security for Ghana, Liberia, and Senegal. Different agroclimatic, ecological, social, and farming conditions in West Africa were represented. Using data-driven Random Forest and Chi-Square Automatic Interaction Detection (CHAID) decision tree methodology, this study classified 644 Ghanaian, 323 Liberian, and 510 Senegalese households for comparison and interpretation on food security. The predictors growing Liberian and Senegalese decision trees imply community support, diverse selling channels outside villages, resolving the dispute over farmland, and increasing community-level investment for food availability and access demonstrate household food security. Predictor importance on food security for Ghana highlighted the role of independent producers and food suppliers toward stability. Household food security or insecurity was distinguished by location-specific and gender-led households in Liberia and Senegal. Practically, the results presented a need to step-up agricultural education and extension based on an empirical field survey and its interpretations. The results can add considerations to the role of farming households as independent and individual suppliers and consumers to long-standing dimensions of food security, i.e., food availability, access, and stability.

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