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Urban gardening in Dhaka: Practices, constraints, and impacts

Urban gardening in Dhaka: Practices, constraints, and impacts
The production of fruits and vegetables by urban residents can enhance food security and provide various additional benefits, but empirical data to support these claims is limited. This study uses questionnaire-based data from 1320 households in Dhaka, Bangladesh, including 1079 gardeners and 241 non-gardeners, to examine urban gardening practices, challenges, and impacts on fruit and vegetable consumption and income. The analysis distinguishes between rooftop and land-based gardens. Impact is quantified using propensity score matching to address selection bias. The study finds that women manage 83% of urban gardens in the study sample, often with assistance from their spouses. However, they face challenges, including a lack of knowledge, pests and diseases, insufficient gardening inputs, and limited soil. The study finds that rooftop gardeners have 19% more vegetable intake (p = 0.024) and 7% more fruit intake (p = 0.015) than non-gardeners with access to a rooftop. However, no significant impact on fruit and vegetable intake is found for land-based gardeners, likely because they are more oriented toward selling than own consumption. The effect on income was small but significant for both garden types. Gardeners also reported multiple benefits other than food and income, including personal enjoyment, aesthetic value, family cohesion, and social interaction. Raising the productivity of urban gardens by addressing the main challenges through training can enhance the contribution of urban gardening to diets.

This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1002/uar2.70041
Skor altmetrik:
Jumlah Kutipan Dimensi:


Ekspor kutipan:
TI  - Urban gardening in Dhaka: Practices, constraints, and impacts 
AU  - Akber, N. 
AU  - Schreinemachers, P. 
AU  - Kumar, S.S. 
AU  - Uddin, M.N. 
AB  - The production of fruits and vegetables by urban residents can enhance food security and provide various additional benefits, but empirical data to support these claims is limited. This study uses questionnaire-based data from 1320 households in Dhaka, Bangladesh, including 1079 gardeners and 241 non-gardeners, to examine urban gardening practices, challenges, and impacts on fruit and vegetable consumption and income. The analysis distinguishes between rooftop and land-based gardens. Impact is quantified using propensity score matching to address selection bias. The study finds that women manage 83% of urban gardens in the study sample, often with assistance from their spouses. However, they face challenges, including a lack of knowledge, pests and diseases, insufficient gardening inputs, and limited soil. The study finds that rooftop gardeners have 19% more vegetable intake (p = 0.024) and 7% more fruit intake (p = 0.015) than non-gardeners with access to a rooftop. However, no significant impact on fruit and vegetable intake is found for land-based gardeners, likely because they are more oriented toward selling than own consumption. The effect on income was small but significant for both garden types. Gardeners also reported multiple benefits other than food and income, including personal enjoyment, aesthetic value, family cohesion, and social interaction. Raising the productivity of urban gardens by addressing the main challenges through training can enhance the contribution of urban gardening to diets. 
PY  - 2026 
UR  - https://www.cifor-icraf.org/knowledge/publication/46388/ 
DO  - https://doi.org/10.1002/uar2.70041 
KW  - domestic gardens, farmers, food security, households, income generation, intake, nutrition, participatory approaches, training, urban agriculture, vegetables, women 
ER  -
%T Urban gardening in Dhaka: Practices, constraints, and impacts 
%A Akber, N. 
%A Schreinemachers, P. 
%A Kumar, S.S. 
%A Uddin, M.N. 
%D 2026 
%U https://www.cifor-icraf.org/knowledge/publication/46388/ 
%R https://doi.org/10.1002/uar2.70041 
%X The production of fruits and vegetables by urban residents can enhance food security and provide various additional benefits, but empirical data to support these claims is limited. This study uses questionnaire-based data from 1320 households in Dhaka, Bangladesh, including 1079 gardeners and 241 non-gardeners, to examine urban gardening practices, challenges, and impacts on fruit and vegetable consumption and income. The analysis distinguishes between rooftop and land-based gardens. Impact is quantified using propensity score matching to address selection bias. The study finds that women manage 83% of urban gardens in the study sample, often with assistance from their spouses. However, they face challenges, including a lack of knowledge, pests and diseases, insufficient gardening inputs, and limited soil. The study finds that rooftop gardeners have 19% more vegetable intake (p = 0.024) and 7% more fruit intake (p = 0.015) than non-gardeners with access to a rooftop. However, no significant impact on fruit and vegetable intake is found for land-based gardeners, likely because they are more oriented toward selling than own consumption. The effect on income was small but significant for both garden types. Gardeners also reported multiple benefits other than food and income, including personal enjoyment, aesthetic value, family cohesion, and social interaction. Raising the productivity of urban gardens by addressing the main challenges through training can enhance the contribution of urban gardening to diets. 
%K domestic gardens 
%K farmers 
%K food security 
%K households 
%K income generation 
%K intake 
%K nutrition 
%K participatory approaches 
%K training 
%K urban agriculture 
%K vegetables 
%K women 
    Tahun publikasi

    2026

    ISSN

    2575-1220

    Penulis

    Akber, N.; Schreinemachers, P.; Kumar, S.S.; Uddin, M.N.

    Bahasa

    English

    Kata kunci

    domestic gardens, farmers, food security, households, income generation, intake, nutrition, participatory approaches, training, urban agriculture, vegetables, women

    Source

    Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems. 11(1): e70041

    Geografis

    Bangladesh