12 July 2017

GREEiNSECT PhD Defence by Afton Halloran

PhD defence

Afton Halloran will be the 1st GREEiNSECT PhD student to defend her thesis

The impact of cricket farming on rural livelihoods, nutrition and the environment in Thailand and Kenya

TimeInsect farm

1 August 2017, 13:00

Place

Festauditoriet 1-01, Bülowsvej 17.
1870 Frederiksberg C

Opponents 

Professor Inge Tetens (chair), Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Associate Professor Elaine Ferguson, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK

Professor Roberta Salomone, Department of Economics, University of Messina, Italy

Supervisor

Associate Professor Nanna Roos, Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Co-supervisor

Associate Professor Sander Bruun, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of Copenhagen

About the thesis

Over the past five years, a growing amount of attention has been placed on the potential of edible insect species to address the global challenge of food and nutrition security. Even greater attention has been put on the handful of insect species which can be easily domesticated and raised en masse.

Some of these species belong to the Gryllidae (cricket) family. The oldest and most developed example of cricket farming for human consumption comes from Thailand. For nearly 20 years, thousands of rural Thai farmers have adopted and developed these unique farming systems, providing not only food for their households but also employment and income.

This development has resulted in the subsequent promotion of small- and medium-scale insect farming systems in rural communities in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), such as Kenya. However, the policy environment for cricket farming, the social and environmental impacts in Thailand and the adoption of cricket farming in Kenya is not well understood. There is therefore a critical need for more research into the impacts of cricket farming on nutrition, rural livelihoods and the environment.

My PhD thesis addresses this research gap by reviewing the literature and empirically examining cases from Thailand and Kenya. The results of this thesis are a part of ’GREEiNSECT: Insects for Green Economy’, a research project that assesses the contribution of insects to green economy.

Download: Table of contents; List of papers; Related work; Summary in English; Dansk resumé; Introduction.

2017, 157 pages.

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