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Food Security Measurement×Household Livelihood Survey×
CampoDevelopment StudiesDevelopment Studies
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen20132000
Autor originalFAO (FIES); FANTA (HFIAS); World Food Programme (FCS)Frank Ellis; CIFOR Poverty Environment Network
TipoExperiential and dietary food-security surveyMulti-source income and assets household survey
Fuente seminalBallard, T. J., Kepple, A. W., & Cafiero, C. (2013). The Food Insecurity Experience Scale: Development of a Global Standard for Monitoring Hunger Worldwide. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). link ↗Ellis, F. (2000). Rural Livelihoods and Diversity in Developing Countries. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780198296966
AliasFood insecurity measurement, FIES, HFIAS, Food Consumption ScoreLivelihood survey, Household income survey, Rural livelihoods survey, Income and assets survey
Relacionados44
ResumenFood security measurement comprises a family of survey-based instruments that capture households' or individuals' access to adequate food, distinct from the U.S. USDA Household Food Security Survey Module. The dominant tools — the FAO Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES), the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS), the World Food Programme's Food Consumption Score (FCS), and dietary-diversity scores such as the Household Dietary Diversity Score (HDDS) — measure either the lived experience of food insecurity or the quantity and quality of the diet, providing the indicators used for global hunger monitoring and humanitarian targeting.A household livelihood survey is an instrument designed to capture the full portfolio of activities, income sources, assets, and expenditures through which a household secures its living. Rooted in the rural-livelihoods literature associated with Frank Ellis and in global comparative income studies such as the CIFOR Poverty Environment Network, it measures welfare and resilience by mapping the diversity of a household's economic activities — farming, wage labour, self-employment, environmental harvesting, transfers, and remittances — rather than reducing the household to a single income or consumption figure.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Food Security Measurement · Household Livelihood Survey. Recuperado el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare