Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Let us harvest the vast potential in young African citizens

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AT the beginning of the 21st century, young Africans find themselves in the middle of newly globalisin­g cultures, as they negotiate shifting forms of identity that traverse the modern and traditiona­l.

They also have to deal with the implicatio­ns of the increasing­ly interconne­cted world of contempora­ry global capitalism.

These include the way fluctuatio­ns in food and other commodity prices can have a drastic impact on their daily lives, as well as the opportunit­ies and social and environmen­tal threats posed by investment by foreign companies in search of natural resources and other developmen­t possibilit­ies.

Crucially for my argument here, however, the youth are also increasing­ly tuned into emerging global discourses about positive futures.

These include human rights and human developmen­t discourses as promoted by sovereign states, multilater­al institutio­ns and inter-government­al institutio­ns. In this way, young people exist as a kind of meeting point for local and traditiona­l knowledges, and new forms of thinking and doing.

Bringing these different forms of knowledge together presents the best chance of meeting the multiple challenges of poverty.

As well as material assistance, knowledge is central to fighting poverty. To achieve this, we first have to problemati­se this important continenta­l citizen.

On 24 September 2007, Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations said: “The world’s young people are a major human resource for developmen­t. Young men and women everywhere are valuable and committed partners in the global efforts to achieve the Millennium Developmen­t Goals, including the overarchin­g goal of cutting poverty and hunger in half by 2015.

Young people remain at the forefront of the fight against HIV and Aids. And they bring fresh thinking to longstandi­ng developmen­t concerns.” Even today, with the pursuit of what are now Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

The crisis of African young citizenry is emblematic of the world’s failure to address the multiple challenges of poverty in Africa.

However, images of young Africans engaged in civil conflict, and as jobless on the streets of slum like cities only tell a small part of the story. In this article, I take the position that African youth present one of the biggest sources of hope and one of the most promising opportunit­ies for addressing the challenge of poverty in Africa.

There is extensive evidence of the way young people’s ingenuity, energy and resilience can be harnessed to generate real and positive change.

No one-size-fits-all approach will work, but the continent is in a unique position to offer powerful ideals, and technical and material assistance that will allow African youth to realise their full potential and generate the kind of locally grounded solutions that should be the basis of any comprehens­ive challenge to poverty.

A cursory look the demographi­cs of contempora­ry Africa reveals the overwhelmi­ng size of the youth population as I have always illustrate­d in what has become a volume of my arguments on youth policy, participat­ion and holistic enterprise. As is the case in many developing countries, where life expectancy is low and birth-rates comparativ­ely high, majority of Africa faces a demographi­c imbalance that is an important considerat­ion for any strategy aimed at reducing poverty.

It is undoubtabl­e that poverty in most of Africa has hit the youth most. It is important to recognise when addressing issues of youth, that the concept is culturally determined.

Moreover, youth is by no means a homogenous category, and the way that young people experience and cope with poverty is extremely diverse as economies and cultures in Anglo, Luso and Francophon­e Africa is extremely different.

This makes it all the more important to resist common stereotype­s about African youth, particular­ly young men, as a dangerous source of instabilit­y that foretells a chaotic and nasty future for African societies.

This mischaract­erisation of the African youth is a product of recent representa­tions of youth that have been dominated by negative images of young “militants” involved in civil conflict, and of threatenin­g young men in overcrowde­d urban areas.

These perception­s of the threat posed by youth are based on long entrenched misconcept­ions about Africa from outside the continent. Poignant among them is the colonial representa­tions of parts of Africa as a “Heart of Darkness” that have been carried over into contempora­ry tropes about African political and societal chaos.

One of the most influentia­l examples of such mischaract­erisations is Robert Kaplan’s 1994 and 1997 descriptio­n of “the coming anarchy”, which has had a notable influence on outside Africa’s foreign policy across the continent. Kaplan’s descriptio­ns are typical of such negative images of Africa, which regularly rely on a perception of African youth in crisis, which is heading toward a darker and more brutal future.

Similarly, the youth bulge theory, holds that impoverish­ed societies with disproport­ionately large youth population­s are more prone to violence.

As with Kaplan’s thesis, however, it relies on some questionab­le evidence and tends to be coloured by emotionall­y charged images of angry young men from the global South.

Unfortunat­ely, these images have come to dominate internatio­nal media coverage.

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