Journal Article

Young people, livelihood building and the transformation of African agriculture: A reality check

Published on 16 April 2024

Over a ten-year period, we, together with colleagues, have used qualitative and quantitative analysis to explore the dominant narratives and ‘conventional wisdom’ about young people and agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Throughout, we have sought to carefully consider the conceptualisations embedded in these narratives, their empirical foundations, and their implications for policy and intervention.

This research involved a number of different projects, methodologies, funders and partners. Field work took place in 22 sites across seven SSA countries (Ghana, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Nigeria, Uganda, Ethiopia, Cote d’Ivoire), with sites being selected in part to reflect differences in economic geography and intensity of agricultural commercialisation. Findings, conclusions and recommendations are set out in the edited volume Youth and the Rural Economy in Africa: Hard Work and Hazard (Sumberg, 2021) and a number of other publications (Sumberg et al., 2015201720192020Ripoll et al., 2017Yeboah et al., 20172020Sumberg and Hunt, 2019Abay et al., 2020Carreras et al., 2020Glover and Sumberg, 2020Crossouard et al., 2021bOosterom et al., 2022).

This perspectives paper draws heavily on the last chapter of Youth and the Rural Economy (Sumberg et al., 2021b). It synthesises findings and sets out their implications for policy relating to youth, agriculture and rural development. Overall, our research lends support to some elements of the standard stories around rural youth, while challenging others. However, even where we find broad support for dominant narratives, there is need for more nuance than is generally offered in shorthand treatments of ‘youth’ questions. We argue that this critical revisiting of the storytelling around youth in rural Africa has important implications for policy content and development interventions, particularly in relation to routes to social adulthood, food system transformation and food security.

Cite this publication

J.Sumberg et al (2024) 'Young people, livelihood building and the transformation of African agriculture: A reality check', Global Food Security, V41, DOI: 10.1016/j.gfs.2024.100759

Authors

James Sumberg

Emeritus Fellow

Carolina Holland-Szyp

Research Officer

Thomas Yeboah

Bureau of Integrated Rural Development (BIRD), Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology

Marjoke Oosterom

Power and Popular Politics Cluster Lead

Barbara Crossouard

Publication details

doi
10.1016/j.gfs.2024.100759
language
English

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Region
Africa

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