Journal Article

Outlook on Agriculture;46.3

Rural Transformation, Cereals and Youth in Africa: What Role for International Agricultural Research?

Published on 18 August 2017

Young people are increasingly linked to targeted agriculture and food security interventions. In Africa, the argument is that the combination of agricultural value chains, technology and entrepreneurship will unlock a sweet spot for youth employment.

This article examines this argument from a rural transformations perspective. A framework is proposed with which to analyse young people’s economic room to manoeuvre in different rural contexts and the differential abilities of young people to exploit associated opportunities. Using cereal agri-food systems as an example, the article identifies two new research areas that address important knowledge gaps: how young rural people in Africa engage with these systems and what pathways they use to become engaged. To address these questions, we propose an analytical framework built around key contextual factors that constrain or enable young people’s economic activity. By pursuing the proposed research agenda, international agricultural research could make important contributions to both agricultural policy debates and development-oriented interventions.

Authors

James Sumberg

Emeritus Fellow

Publication details

published by
Sage
authors
Ripoll, S., Andersson, J., Badstue, L., Büttner, M., Chamberlin, J., Erenstein, O. and Sumberg, J.
journal
Outlook on Agriculture, volume 46, issue 3
doi
10.1177/0030727017724669
language
English

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