Here are all the keywords related to this blog post: migration health, Zimbabwean migrants, South Africa healthcare, food security, remittances, WhatsApp groups, digital remittances, Mukuru, food insecurity, National Health Insurance, NHI Act 2024, undocumented migrants, asylum seekers, refugees, healthcare access, xenophobia, documentation barriers, nutrition, malnutrition, mental health, chronic diseases, urban agriculture, diaspora, cross-border remittances, informal settlements, Alexandra township, Khayelitsha, Delft, Hillbrow, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, Zimbabwe economic crisis, COVID-19, pandemic impact, female migrants, gender vulnerability, policy reform, primary healthcare, mobile clinics, social protection, food vouchers, transaction costs, financial inclusion, urban food security, spaza shops, food deserts, remittance corridors, health policy, migration policy, Border Management Authority Act, public health, communicable diseases, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, maternal health, antenatal care, vaccine coverage, food remittances, grocery delivery, Malaicha, fintech, mobile money, employment precarity, domestic workers, informal economy, health disparities, health equity, vulnerable populations, integrated services, Scalabrini Centre, NGOs, civil society, community gardens, nutritional deficiencies, iron deficiency, anemia, obesity, ultra-processed foods, mental health crisis, anxiety, depression, chronic stress, remittance pressure, health outcomes, healthcare utilization, documentation status, legal status, asylum hearings, expired permits, healthcare gatekeeping, emergency services, late-stage disease, disease transmission, maternal mortality, antiretroviral treatment, immunization, food prices, hyperinflation, currency instability, El Niño drought, agricultural failure, economic hardship, income collapse, food price inflation, supply chain disruptions, lockdown restrictions, border closures, urban planning, food retail, township economies, mobile technology, digital platforms, WhatsApp Business, SMS notifications, bulk ordering, price comparisons, exchange rates, financial literacy, predatory lending, sustainable development, diaspora investment, economic stabilization, political instability, one-stop centers, legal assistance, nutrition counseling, employment assistance, community support groups, government-NGO partnerships, private sector collaboration, health monitoring, anti-xenophobia campaigns, medical education, cultural competence, patient advocacy, community health workers, policy evaluation, research gaps, longitudinal studies, health trajectories, participatory research, epidemiological data, health information systems, migration status, anonymity protection, intersectional vulnerabilities, age discrimination, language barriers, cultural beliefs, regional cooperation, Southern Africa, SADC, humanitarian response, crisis preparedness, pandemic preparedness, food relief programs, emergency assistance, constitutional rights, human rights, social cohesion, integration models, return migration

The WhatsApp Groups Feeding Harare: How the Diaspora Is Bankrolling Zimbabwe’s Urban Organic Food Movement

WhatsApp Remittances and Health: The Cost of Feeding Families Across Borders Money From Abroad, Vegetables at Home, and the Economics of Eating Clean A 32-year-old electrician from Harare never thought he would leave Zimbabwe. Nevertheless, economic collapse forced him out. Today, he lives in Cape Town’s informal settlements, working casual jobs. However, his WhatsApp notifications […]

The WhatsApp Groups Feeding Harare: How the Diaspora Is Bankrolling Zimbabwe’s Urban Organic Food Movement Read More »