How to Elevate Rural Youth Representation for Inclusive Agriculture and Planning
The GIZ Agriculture Team in Kenya and two rural youth representatives share their experiences on participatory policy and project initiatives. Webinar with pre-recorded inputs for enhanced experience
Typically a National Youth in Agribusiness Strategy will be faced with numerous challenges in a devolved governmental system. This webinar had a look at how youth strategies can be planned sufficiently and carried out practically at regional level.
What needs to be done to support rural youth in their role as change agents, to organise themselves as democratically legitimized representatives and, all in all, to create a gateway for structured coordination and communication with different types of stakeholders?
Participants had the opportunity to watch the entire input presentations in their own time beforehand without the usual technical hitches and later join the actual webinar for only the discussion!
Key takeaways from the webinar
Challenges rural youth is faced with
- Insufficient or completely lacking market information
- Very limited access to finance and land
- Weak and informal youth networks
- Lengthy and bureaucratic processes for registering agribusinesses
- Youths’ general lack of interest in agriculture
What is required to promote gainful employment for rural youth?
- Create communications platforms to hook up youths and politicians or policymakers, such as facilitated by GIZ at the Youth in Agribusiness Conference in Kenya’s Western Region.
- Support youth to get organized in youth associations and youth umbrella organizations, as legitimate access nodes to policymaking processes and to cooperate as partners of GIZ.
- Understand that agripreneurship is more than the farm level. To run successful businesses, a rather good understanding of farm management and business skills are required, as much as access to high-quality inputs, enough land and finance in particular.
Important recommendations for projects
- For gainful youth participation in agricultural policy decision processes, one needs to get them on board as early as possible, and to be more effective one should identify youths who are highly motivated with a willingness to be a good role model for their peers (“proper targeting of role models”).
- According to senior policy advisor Shadrack Mutavi, the youth approach implemented in Kenya can be emulated in other African countries. He summed up some highlights:
The conference setting allowed competition between young agripreneurs. It highly motivated other youths to rethink their attitude towards agriculture (1), get involved in agribusinesses (2) and take a chance to be role models and youth leaders (3). It had been an excellent opportunity for the youth to reach out, exchange with senior policy officials, and likewise facilitated discussions at eye level (4). - What are the emerging policy issues that need attention to ensure a conducive business environment for the youth?
According to Shadrack, access to finance (1), to land (2) and to training opportunities (3) are the three key issues that most affect the participation of youth in agribusinesses. Therefore, all three needed to be prioritized in agricultural policies and program development.
Conclusions
- Let’s start talking with the youth – instead of talking about them
- Let’s get a better understanding of the needs of youth as striving agripreneurs, not as poor farmers.
- Let´s legitimize the voice of youth through supporting them to set up Youth Associations and Umbrella organizations in order to legitimate their role in policy decision processes (1) and enable them to be good and powerful speakers, representatives and role models for their peers (2).
- Once this is done, youth can be job creators in the agricultural sector, rather than job seekers.
What is it all about?
“Youth have the energy, youth have the number and youth have the voice”
The second webinar in the new online series on rural employment with a focus on youth is zooming in on the East Africa region with inputs from Western Kenya — having focused on the MENA-region in the previous webinar.
Of the 1.3m Kenyan youths entering the labour market annually at least 300,000 are left behind without any formal or informal employment opportunity. While Western Kenya is an area with high potential for agricultural production, small-scale structures, institutional voids and deficient service delivery cause for low productivity, low incomes and a rural exodus. Employment potentials in agribusiness, however, exist in value chains and support services, especially through division of tasks. Kenya’s decision-makers have acknowledged the need for new strategies and shifted towards taking the needs of the rural youth into closer consideration.
Pre-recorded presentations
All inputs were already available as video recordings before the actual webinar, during which there were only kick-off summaries of the presentations. Participants were kindly requested to watch the video inputs prior to the event. In case of a participant foreseeing not having time to participate, they had the option to submit their questions to the moderator via email, who relayed them to the presenters during the event.
National component coordinator Kenda Mwenja expands on Kenya’s demographic dividend — 8:08 mins
Kenda is with the bilateral project on Food Security Through Improved Agricultural Productivity in Western Kenya. He focuses on the strategic collaboration of different projects on cross-cutting issues such as rural youth employment.
Shadrack Mutavi elaborates on the Kenyan agricultural policy landscape shift — 10:26 mins
The Senior Policy Advisor has a look at the a new focus on the youth in agribusiness and challenges for policy processes in a devolved governmental system.
Prisca Watko shares experiences with participatory project initiatives — 8:56 mins
The communications advisor based at GIZ Nairobi looks at outcomes of focus group discussions and interactive workshops for self-organisation.
Video compilation from the youth conference in 2018 — 6:10 mins
Voices from youths, politicians and GIZ advisors.
Oliver van der Valk’s quick kick-off into the subject — 1:26 mins
The Agriculture Advisor, based in Kisumu, says what the webinar is all about.
Special guest from the Lake Victoria region — 3:02 mins
Successful dairy farmer Lydiah Wafula speaks from her point of view as an individual farmer, especially about the challenges she faced when starting her agribusiness in 2013. She is with the youth organisation KCYAA talking about their needs and demands.
Special guest from the Lake Victoria region — 6:29 mins
Young agripreneur Gabriel Akali shares his perspective as representatives of the Kakamega County Youth Association in Agribusiness. The horticulturalist is also the chairperson of the youth organisation KCYAA. He explains the process of forming and registering the association and the vision he has for it in future as a legitimate entry point to government and other stakeholders as well as for it being a platform for effective peer-to-peer learning.
What had been the aim?
Based on the support to the National Youth in Agribusiness Strategy the team wanted to draw a detailed picture of the processes and entailed challenges of validating a national agribusiness strategy in dialogue with regional and intergovernmental policy bodies and the rural youth themselves. The colleagues in Kenya were to share their approach of designing a structured gateway to the rural youth. Most importantly, participants were to be provided with an opportunity to directly discuss principles of self-organization and representation as pre-requisites for efficiently enhancing agripreneurship and to interact with the rural youth leaders Gabriel and Lydiah.
The organisers provided the opportunity to submit questions prior to the webinar, which were addressed during the Q&A part of the session!
About the organisers
The webinar was jointly organised by:
- SNRD Africa and the Sector Project Rural Development With a Focus on Youth
- The bilateral project Food Security Through Improved Agricultural Productivity in Western Kenya on behalf of GIZ Agriculture and Rural Development in Kenya
We are very much looking forward to receiving feedback on the webinar, both in terms of content as well as to the new format that we’ve chosen.