Browsing by Author "Tadele, G"
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Item Young People and Policy Narratives in sub -Saharan Africa(Future Agricultures Consortium, 2012-02) Anyidoho, N.A; Kayuni, H; Ndungu, J; Leavy, J; Sall, M; Tadele, G; Sumberg, JBoth agriculture and young people are high on African development agendas. African governments, through the Comprehensive African Agricultural Development Programme, (CAADP) have agreed to commit at least ten percent of their budgets to agriculture with the goal of a six percent growth in the sector. By the end of 2010, 22 governments had prepared and signed regional compacts setting out a strategy and investment plan for agricultural development (IFPRI 2010). Greater attention on African agriculture is also reflected in an increased aid policy focus (de Janvry and Sadoulet 2012). The underlying rationale is to increase productivity across agro-industry so that agriculture can play its historic role as an ‘engine’ of economic growth in the transition to more industrialised economies. Interest in agriculture has been further heightened by the food, fuel and financial crises and the knock-on effects on both rural producers and consumers. There are concerns too about the impacts of the crises on young people, and in African policy agendas this is reflected in increased attention to high rates o f youth unemployment and underemployment.Item Young People, Agriculture, and Employment in Rural Africa(World Institute for Development Economics Research (United Nations University), 2014-04) Sumberg, J; Anyidoho, N.A; Chasukwa, M; Chinsinga, B; Leavy, J; Tadele, G; Whitfield, S; Yaro, JThis paper examines the current interest in addressing the problem of young people’s unemployment in Africa through agriculture. Using notions of transitions and mobilities we set out a transformative work and opportunity space framework that privileges difference and diversity among work opportunities, rural areas and young people. We argue that policy and programmes that seek to engage young people with agriculture must be more realistic, rooted in more context-specific economic and social analysis, and appreciative of the variety of ways that rural men and women use agriculture to serve their needs and interests.