| dc.description.abstract |
Indigenous crops have historically supported resilient food systems in Sub-Saharan Africa, yet
their potential remains underutilised and neglected within African food systems. Drawing on
oral historical accounts from 79 elders and participatory futures workshops in Bomet and
Baringo counties, this paper explores the meanings and values attached to indigenous
underutilised crops and how these narratives can inform efforts to revitalise indigenous crops
within Kenya’s food systems. Findings reveal that indigenous crops were central to precolonial
food systems, contributing to food production, healthy diets, medicinal practices, and cultural
ceremonies. However, colonial agricultural restructuring, particularly the promotion of maize
and commercial crops, gradually marginalised indigenous crops and transformed local
foodways. Despite this, elders’ narratives revealed that indigenous crops persisted, sustained
mostly through women’s continued cultivation and elders’ consumption, reflecting resilience
and resistance. Their narratives express a strong desire to revive these crops, driven by
concerns over nutrition, climate resilience, health, and cultural heritage. Yet, barriers remain,
including younger generations’ lack of knowledge and interest, limited market access, and
policy neglect. Revitalising indigenous crops requires a decolonial approach that raises
awareness of their value while addressing structural barriers to their production. This study
contributes to a growing body of literature that seeks to learn from the past to inform
sustainable food futures, reimagining indigenous crops in future food systems |
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