This presentation was given by Anne Rietveld (Bioversity International), as part of the Annual Gender Scientific Conference hosted by the CGIAR Collaborative Platform for Gender Research. The event took place on 25-27 September 2018 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, hosted by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and co-organized with KIT Royal Tropical Institute.
Read more: http://gender.cgiar.org/gender_events/annual-conference-2018/
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Bridging gender and youth studies - Learning from rural young women and men in central Uganda
1. Bridging gender and youth studies
learning from rural young women and
men in Central Uganda
Anne Rietveld
Margreet van der Burg
2. Why is ‘Youth’ such a hot topic today?
“Given the fact that Uganda has one of the most youthful population in the
world, one would expect the country to have an energetic productive
population contributing towards the country’s development agenda.
Unfortunately, this is not the case because majority youth in Uganda have
turned out to be violent and hostile” Nilepost Feb 11 2018
“Museveni tells ghetto youth to shun opposition, gives them goodies
President Museveni has blamed opposition leaders in Wakiso and Kampala for
politically disorienting the youth instead of helping them fight unemployment
and poverty” Nilepost Sep 2018
“Uganda’s Bobi Wine embodies the rise of African youth.
Popular Kampala singer challenges his country’s ageing
leader in song and parliament” Financial times Aug 2018
“Bobi Wine Is Teaching Youth to Hate Govt –
Minister says” The monitor Sep 2018
“Attracting youth to agriculture: The future in
agriculture programming promising if we focus
on working with young people that dominate
this country”. Jan 2018 New vision
Museveni Asks Youth to Take Interest in Commercial Agriculture
President Yoweri Museveni has urged the youth in the country to wake up and
contribute to the development of Uganda so that they are able to Aug, 2018 Nile
post
How Can Uganda Keep Its Youths In The Farms?
The country with the youngest population in the world,
Uganda, has seen its youths migrate to towns leaving
behind ageing farmers and declining traditional
agricultural systems. 30cuts international Jan 2013
“Why all these youth entrepreneurship grants are not bearing
fruit? Why are we throwing so much into youth enterprise and
getting very little impact in terms of actual job creation which is
the long term end goal of these efforts?” Nile post Feb 2018
Poor policy implementation a challenge to youth initiatives
The observer, Aug 2017
3. Study Objectives / RQs
To investigate the aspirations of young men and
women in relation to their livelihoods, in order
to
1. better understand the range of aspirations of
young people and
2. to what extent and how these aspirations are
associated or linked to agriculture and
3. the importance of gender and the
(dis)enabling environment of young women
and men in realizing these aspirations.
4. Paper lay-out
1. Introduction
2. Conceptual and methodological framework
2.1 Why studying youth and gender together?
2.2 From Youth and Gender to gender and generation
• Livelihood pathways and opportunity space
• Intersecting gender and generational norms in relation
to opportunity space
• Aspirations next to ambition in relation to opportunity
space
• Inequalities caused by economic deprivation and
identity-based discrimination
2.3 Data collection
5. Kisweeka Trading Center
• 51% less ‘youth’ recorded than would be expected on
basis of national demographics
• Young women leave more often than young men
• About 2/3 that leave, go to Kampala ‘metropolis’
• Young men own land, or have prospect on inheriting
land, much more often than young women
6. Qualitative data
• Re-analysis GENNOVATE case-study Kisweeka
(2014)
• In-depth interviews with 16 young men and women
from Kisweeka but living in and outside of Kisweeka
(2017)
Migrants Stayers
18-24 YRS old 25-30 YRS old 18-24 YRS old 25-30 YRS old
Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Male
Siifa Patrick Cisse Miracle Isa Gerald Macalata Chris
Susan Francis Esther Sunday Brenda Richard Deborah Ambrose
7. Results: Migration
Reasons to migrate:
• Work – for women and men
• Education – for women and men
• Marriage – for women
But also:
• Visits or short stays as an ‘orientation’
• A preference for urban life
Migration trends reinforce migration trends:
• influences aspirations;
• makes it easier to migrate (chain-migration)
All ‘stayers’ had migrated
as much as ‘migrants’
8. Results: Interest in Farming
‘Migrant’ or ‘stayer’, man or woman: majority
youth engaged in agriculture in one way or another
Four categories identified presenting different
degrees of engagement and interest in agriculture:
1) Farming? No!
2) Reluctant farmers
3) Farming as part of diversification strategies
4) Farming? It’s my dream and future
9. Reluctant farmers
Farming without ambition to farm
- Feeling deprived of agency
- Frame farming as ‘dead-end’
- No ownership of land
- Hope to move out of farming
soon
Young men dependent on father
(family) for support for education,
farm as contribution to parents’
household
Young women (single mothers) resort
to farming, to feed themselves and
children
10. Farming as part of diversification
strategies
Young men and women promoting livelihood
diversification
• Farming framed as important contribution to
livelihoods but one that should be practiced
together with other activities. Farming is not focus
of aspirations
• For women; additional livelihood activities which
generates (small) income and reduce dependency.
Farming is for food production / subsistence “You
can’t live in the village and not farm”
• For men; farming is geared towards income
generation, risk spreading and optimizing use of
land owned.
11. Discussion – Distaste for agriculture?
• Distaste mainly visible in category 1, 2 (3)
• Consists of different elements:
• Farming = ‘heavy work for low returns’
• The rural area where there are no facilities
• Farming not attractive or even feasible
specifically to young women
12. Discussion – Farming not for women?
• Women’s weaker resource base (no access to
land)
• Gender norms which discourage women’s
independent commercial (agricultural)
activities
• Normative expectations for women to ‘find a
husband, raise a family’ and to be under the
authority of their husband rather than aiming
for professional / economic fulfillment.
13. Conclusions
• The rural isolated -> Fluidity in rural and urban
livelihood pathways, back and forth, village as safety
net
• Few young people (m/w), aspire to make farming
their primary livelihood, yet many are engaged in
farming in one way or another
• Young women tend to invest less in farming and rural
livelihoods than young men
• Access to land = issue for most youth, but more for
youth from families with little land and for women
• Relations structure young women’s opportunity space
different from young men’s (reproduction / fertility)
Bioversity worked in kisweeka since 2010, project aiming at youth. Baseline, farmer experimentation groups; few youth. Where were they? 2012 sub-sample survey with parents of adult children.
All so-called ‘stayers’ had migrated as much as the ‘migrants’ at one point in their lives.
For both categories the native village often remained the safe haven where one returns to when job or businesses fail or relations end. Whatever the reason to emigrate was (educational, economic or lifestyle aspirations), the destination was usually determined by where one had friends or relatives originating from Kisweeka. The idea of the rural as an isolated place thus, does not apply anymore to the vast majority of young people in and from Kisweeka. If they have not made (extended) visits to other parts of the country and notably the city themselves, they have friends, siblings and other relatives who did. This does inevitably influence their aspirations; and it makes it easier to migrate for whatever reason;
Mostly distaste of rural life and hard physical work, not denying farming can be profitable 1m/1f
Elaborate later 3f/1m
Elaborate later 4m/4f
Farming at the core of livelihood, no off-farm aspirations, positive about rural life. 2m
Unplanned pregnancy and /or divorce drive young women back to village , parent’s house, where there’s no alternative for farming. Especially when they still have breastfeeding children.