posted on 2024-09-05, 20:58authored byThomas Yeboah
This paper is concerned with how rural young people in Ghana engage with or are affected by two processes closely associated with rural and economic transformation – agricultural intensification and agricultural commercialisation. The objective was to develop a better understanding of steps and pathways by which particular groups of young people seek to construct livelihoods in or around agricultural commercialisation hotspots, and the outcomes associated with these efforts. The research reported in this paper draws on in-depth interviews conducted with 35 rural youth in the Tuobodom and Adutwie communities in the Techiman North District of Brong Ahafo Region, Ghana, an area that we define as a ‘commercialisation hotspot’. The overall conclusion of the study is that, whether or not a young person wants to be there, being in an area of intensive agricultural commercialisation compared to one with limited commercialisation is probably as good as it gets.
Funding
Department for International Development, UK Government
History
Publisher
APRA, Future Agricultures Consortium
Citation
Yeboah, T. (2019) Building livelihoods: Young People and Agricultural Commercialisation in Africa. APRA working paper 20, Future Agricultures Consortium