Foro Global sobre Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutrición (Foro FSN)
Youth engagement and employment in agriculture and food system can be effectively promoted from curricula and practical aspects. Youth, who are the majority of most developing nations’ populations, are not attracted to taking agriculture as a profession nor as an entrepreneur or career.
From the perspectives and experience in most developing countries, the main reasons identified are i. Agriculture is perceived and practiced as males’ enterprise, although females are the majority of the workforce; ii. The use of manual tools, as well as the unattractive nature of farming; and iii. Its low profitability; agriculture is associated with poverty among the youth.
Hence, to promote youth’s engagement and employment in agriculture, there must be i. conscious mainstreaming of gender and ICT into the teaching, research, service provision, and practice of agriculture at all levels; ii. Development of gender-responsive low cost and available technologies to ease activities along the Agriculture value chain; iii. Youth empowerment and the teaching of agriculture as a profit-oriented subject at all levels; and v. formulation and implementation of gender-responsive policies at all levels. (Olanike Deji, Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria.
Youth engagement and employment in agriculture and food system can be effectively promoted from curricula and practical aspects. Youth, who are the majority of most developing nations’ populations, are not attracted to taking agriculture as a profession nor as an entrepreneur or career.
From the perspectives and experience in most developing countries, the main reasons identified are i. Agriculture is perceived and practiced as males’ enterprise, although females are the majority of the workforce; ii. The use of manual tools, as well as the unattractive nature of farming; and iii. Its low profitability; agriculture is associated with poverty among the youth.
Hence, to promote youth’s engagement and employment in agriculture, there must be i. conscious mainstreaming of gender and ICT into the teaching, research, service provision, and practice of agriculture at all levels; ii. Development of gender-responsive low cost and available technologies to ease activities along the Agriculture value chain; iii. Youth empowerment and the teaching of agriculture as a profit-oriented subject at all levels; and v. formulation and implementation of gender-responsive policies at all levels. (Olanike Deji, Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria.