Young People's Aspirations in Agriculture: A Case Study of Ghana's Cocoa Sector
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Abstract
Our paper1 considers the question of young people‘s aspirations in agriculture in light
of the renewed interest in the agricultural sector as a viable basis for development in
sub-Saharan Africa and the perception that young people‘s involvement is important
for the success of this project.
Life choices and outcomes are affected in part by aspirations. The nature and
formation of young people‘s aspirations therefore have direct implications for
emerging visions and future models of agriculture to the extent that young people‘s
aspirations inform the choices they make in regards to agriculture. Recent research
presents aspiration formation as a dynamic process, developing within and
influenced by the context in which a person lives. This context encompasses
personal beliefs, societal expectations, educational and other life opportunities and
constraints, among many others. The literature presents two main ways of
conceptualising aspirations. First are concepts of aspirations that embody some
component of reality: that is, what people expect to achieve (see MacBrayne, 1987).
Second are aspirations as ‗hopes and dreams‘ and thus distinct from expectations
rooted in reality (Morrison Guterman and Akerman, 2008; Quaglia and Cobb, 1996,
among others. See Leavy and Smith, 2010, for a review). Our study took a broad
view of aspirations, asking young people in rural Ghana what they want to do in the
future and whether cocoa farming would feature in those plans. Some plans were
immediate and realistic (for example, farming now to get money to learn a trade),
while others were long-term and perhaps less likely for our sample of young people
(for example, obtaining a university degree and subsequently securing a white collar
job).
Description
Paper for “Young People, Farming and Food”: International Conference on the
Future of the Agrifood Sector
University of Ghana, Legon
19 – 21 March 2012