Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://www.repositorio.uem.mz/handle258/1472
Title: Percepções sobre os hábitos alimentares entre os adolescentes do distrito de Namacurra, província de Zambézia
Authors: Cuinhane, Carlos
Matavele, Sheila Lídia Arsénio
Keywords: Adolescentes
Hábitos alimentares
Dieta alimentar
Issue Date: May-2025
Publisher: Universidade Eduardo Mondlane
Abstract: The district of Namacurra produces enough food to sustain the needs of the local population, but t a high level of food insecurity. However, little is known about the reasons and eating habits of the population of this district. This research analyzed the perceptions of eating habits among adolescents in the Namacurra district. This study was based on the argument that adolescents' perceptions of their eating habits are complex and heterogeneous, given the interaction between their parents' economic, social and cultural factors, which shape adolescents' individual and collective habits. Methodologically, the study applied qualitative research based on 42 semi-structured interviews with adolescents and parents, 4 key players, and 8 focus groups with adolescents and parents. The data was analyzed using the content analysis technique and the interpretation of the results was based on Bourdieu's habitus theory. The results showed that both adolescents and their parents consume a variety of foods, both locally produced foods, such as cassava flour, rice, madjembe, mukwane (pumpkin leaf, tseke), and sweet potatoes, and non- locally produced foods such as maize and cabbage. In the family environment, cassava flour is the most consumed because it is associated with the perception that it gives strength and energy to carry out daily activities. In contrast, maize flower and cabbage are foods associated with high social status due to their scarcity and high cost of accessibility. In the school environment and on the street, adolescents prefer peanuts and malambi ice cream, foods that symbolize acceptance among their peers. Adolescents who eat different foods, such as sweet potatoes, suffer stigmatization. From the perspective of adolescents and parents, "food" represents what is prepared and consumed at home, while what is prepared by strangers and consumed on the street is not considered as food. The research concludes that adolescents' eating habits are a product of the socialization of their parents and the cultural environment in which they are inserted, revealing influence of socio-cultural factors on the formation of these habits.
URI: http://www.repositorio.uem.mz/handle258/1472
Appears in Collections:DS - FLCS - Dissertações de Mestrado

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