TY - CHAP
T1 - Mobile rural youth in northern Ghana
T2 - combining near and distant opportunity spaces
AU - Gough, Katherine
AU - Birch-Thomsen, Torben
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Young people in northern Ghana are growing up in a very different environment
from their southern counterparts. While the south is the locus of the major cities,
industries, and most important cash crops, the north is primarily rural with an
agricultural base, much of it subsistence. This distinction between the southern
core and northern periphery has a long history, stemming from when the country
of Ghana came into being. Under colonial rule, the north was treated as a cheap
source of labour to support the development of the export sector concentrated in
the coastal port towns and in the southern forest belt where most cash crop cultivation took place (Songsore, 2003). Labour migration from the north to work on cocoa farms, in mines, and in urban areas located in the south has thus long taken place (Awumbila & Ardayfio-Schandorf, 2008). Import substitution industrialisation policies, followed by structural adjustment programmes and
neoliberalism, have all contributed to increasing the inequality between the north
and the south. Although Ghana has now joined the ranks of lower middle-income
countries, its northern part lags behind, with 22.2% of the population living below the poverty line of US$1.25 per day (Amanor-Boadu, Zereyesus, & Asiedu-Dartey, 2013). Despite Ghana having recently crossed the threshold to being predominantly urban, the primary occupation for both men and women remains agriculture, forestry, and fishing; approaching half (45.8%) of all households are defined as agricultural households (Ghana Statistical Service, 2012). Widespread reports that young people are no longer interested in agriculture, however, and are leaving the rural areas in droves have resulted in a series of policies being introduced with the aim of getting young people to stay in rural areas and engage in farming (Okali & Sumberg, 2012). This approach, however, overlooks the range of nonfarm entrepreneurial activities that take place in rural areas (Anyidoho, Leavy, & Asenso-Okyere, 2012). The aim of this chapter is to examine the livelihood strategies of young people living in three villages near the town of Bole in the Northern Region of Ghana, looking at their farming and fishing activities, nonfarm businesses in the village, and the role of migration in business establishment. Arguably, since many of the young people have already lived outside their rural communities, rather than trying to stop them from moving, their
mobility should be seen as a potential source of capital and experience, which
those who return can use to invest in farming or establishing an alternative
business.
AB - Young people in northern Ghana are growing up in a very different environment
from their southern counterparts. While the south is the locus of the major cities,
industries, and most important cash crops, the north is primarily rural with an
agricultural base, much of it subsistence. This distinction between the southern
core and northern periphery has a long history, stemming from when the country
of Ghana came into being. Under colonial rule, the north was treated as a cheap
source of labour to support the development of the export sector concentrated in
the coastal port towns and in the southern forest belt where most cash crop cultivation took place (Songsore, 2003). Labour migration from the north to work on cocoa farms, in mines, and in urban areas located in the south has thus long taken place (Awumbila & Ardayfio-Schandorf, 2008). Import substitution industrialisation policies, followed by structural adjustment programmes and
neoliberalism, have all contributed to increasing the inequality between the north
and the south. Although Ghana has now joined the ranks of lower middle-income
countries, its northern part lags behind, with 22.2% of the population living below the poverty line of US$1.25 per day (Amanor-Boadu, Zereyesus, & Asiedu-Dartey, 2013). Despite Ghana having recently crossed the threshold to being predominantly urban, the primary occupation for both men and women remains agriculture, forestry, and fishing; approaching half (45.8%) of all households are defined as agricultural households (Ghana Statistical Service, 2012). Widespread reports that young people are no longer interested in agriculture, however, and are leaving the rural areas in droves have resulted in a series of policies being introduced with the aim of getting young people to stay in rural areas and engage in farming (Okali & Sumberg, 2012). This approach, however, overlooks the range of nonfarm entrepreneurial activities that take place in rural areas (Anyidoho, Leavy, & Asenso-Okyere, 2012). The aim of this chapter is to examine the livelihood strategies of young people living in three villages near the town of Bole in the Northern Region of Ghana, looking at their farming and fishing activities, nonfarm businesses in the village, and the role of migration in business establishment. Arguably, since many of the young people have already lived outside their rural communities, rather than trying to stop them from moving, their
mobility should be seen as a potential source of capital and experience, which
those who return can use to invest in farming or establishing an alternative
business.
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 978-1-138-84459-9
T3 - Routledge spaces of childhood and youth series
SP - 117
EP - 131
BT - Young entrepreneurs in sub-Saharan Africa
A2 - Gough, Katherine
A2 - Langevang, Thilde
PB - Routledge
CY - Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY
ER -