Changes in food provision in Russian households experiencing perestroika |
| |
Authors: | Karin M. Ekstr m,Marianne P. Ekstr m,Marina Potapova,Helena Shanahan |
| |
Affiliation: | Karin M. Ekström,Marianne P. Ekström,Marina Potapova,Helena Shanahan |
| |
Abstract: | The purpose of this article is to describe how households in Novgorod the Great, Russia, deal with food provision in everyday life. The study focuses on changes experienced in food provision and consumption in Russian society, in order to illustrate how households respond to the transformation towards a market economy. The study reflects women's perspective on food provision. Students from Novgorod the Great visited 105 households and asked the women in the household to answer a questionnaire. Results from the study show that in order to cope with changes in society related to economic reforms, Russian households had changed both their food consumption and food production patterns. There was no big difference between urban and rural households. Nearly all of the households were self‐sufficient in the provision of vegetables and potatoes. Many households had a ‘dacha’ (plot), where they produced most of what they needed. Among the changes experienced during recent years (i.e. during the end of the 1990s), a decade after perestroika was initiated, households mentioned the rise in food prices and the decrease of income. Households reported that they consumed less fruit and/or meat. Some households also mentioned that the quality of nourishment had decreased, thereby indicating lower general quality, lower nutrition value, or less healthy foodstuffs. |
| |
Keywords: | Food provision and consumption consumer behaviour household management transforming society |
|
|