Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem

This study examines the development of career aspirations among young people, focusing on how socio-cultural norms and values shape these aspirations and how rural youth view agriculture and rural life as a livelihood option. The study was conducted in pastoral and agropastoral areas of Ethiopia usi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jemal Y. Hassen, Getachew S. Endris, Muluken G. Wordofa, Chanyalew S. Aweke, Jeylan W. Hussein, Leulsegged Kasa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-12-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2473641
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850255827520192512
author Jemal Y. Hassen
Getachew S. Endris
Muluken G. Wordofa
Chanyalew S. Aweke
Jeylan W. Hussein
Leulsegged Kasa
author_facet Jemal Y. Hassen
Getachew S. Endris
Muluken G. Wordofa
Chanyalew S. Aweke
Jeylan W. Hussein
Leulsegged Kasa
author_sort Jemal Y. Hassen
collection DOAJ
description This study examines the development of career aspirations among young people, focusing on how socio-cultural norms and values shape these aspirations and how rural youth view agriculture and rural life as a livelihood option. The study was conducted in pastoral and agropastoral areas of Ethiopia using a qualitative case study approach.. The study findings reveals that youth aspiration formation is deeply embedded within a complex sociocultural and institutional frameworks, as well as the role expectations as defined by society. Additionally, it highlighted that young men’s and women’s career perceptions and aspirations in agriculture are dynamic processes shaped by changing social norms, environmental factors, personal characteristics and traits, policy contexts, and inter-generational relations. The study challenges dominant policy narratives that portray youth mobility as an ego-centric and impromptu pursuit and equates it with permanent abandonment of agriculture and rural life. Instead, it highlights that the youth mobility into, out of, or return to agriculture and rural areas is often a livelihood strategy consciously employed in response to environmental vagaries, conflict, resource constraints and other socio-economic factors. This understanding underscores the need for policies that recognize youth agency and livelihood strategies. Key recommendations for enhancing youth programming in fragile environments include adopting participatory research approaches to understand the trajectories of youth aspirations, context specific appraoches that distiguished between male and female occupational goals, and tailored interventions that align with the context, aspirations and realiteis of youth in pastoral and argo-pastoral areas .
format Article
id doaj-art-00cbc0fa773d4dc9b87c6d8ac5826fa1
institution OA Journals
issn 2331-1886
language English
publishDate 2025-12-01
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
record_format Article
series Cogent Social Sciences
spelling doaj-art-00cbc0fa773d4dc9b87c6d8ac5826fa12025-08-20T01:56:46ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862025-12-0111110.1080/23311886.2025.2473641Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystemJemal Y. Hassen0Getachew S. Endris1Muluken G. Wordofa2Chanyalew S. Aweke3Jeylan W. Hussein4Leulsegged Kasa5School of Rural Development and Agricultural Innovation, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, EthiopiaSchool of Rural Development and Agricultural Innovation, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, EthiopiaSchool of Rural Development and Agricultural Innovation, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, EthiopiaSchool of Rural Development and Agricultural Innovation, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, EthiopiaCollege of Social Sciences and Humanities, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, EthiopiaLASERPULSE Project Manager, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USAThis study examines the development of career aspirations among young people, focusing on how socio-cultural norms and values shape these aspirations and how rural youth view agriculture and rural life as a livelihood option. The study was conducted in pastoral and agropastoral areas of Ethiopia using a qualitative case study approach.. The study findings reveals that youth aspiration formation is deeply embedded within a complex sociocultural and institutional frameworks, as well as the role expectations as defined by society. Additionally, it highlighted that young men’s and women’s career perceptions and aspirations in agriculture are dynamic processes shaped by changing social norms, environmental factors, personal characteristics and traits, policy contexts, and inter-generational relations. The study challenges dominant policy narratives that portray youth mobility as an ego-centric and impromptu pursuit and equates it with permanent abandonment of agriculture and rural life. Instead, it highlights that the youth mobility into, out of, or return to agriculture and rural areas is often a livelihood strategy consciously employed in response to environmental vagaries, conflict, resource constraints and other socio-economic factors. This understanding underscores the need for policies that recognize youth agency and livelihood strategies. Key recommendations for enhancing youth programming in fragile environments include adopting participatory research approaches to understand the trajectories of youth aspirations, context specific appraoches that distiguished between male and female occupational goals, and tailored interventions that align with the context, aspirations and realiteis of youth in pastoral and argo-pastoral areas .https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2473641Pastoral and agro-pastoralopportunity spacelife courseyouth programminglivelihoodDevelopment Studies
spellingShingle Jemal Y. Hassen
Getachew S. Endris
Muluken G. Wordofa
Chanyalew S. Aweke
Jeylan W. Hussein
Leulsegged Kasa
Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
Cogent Social Sciences
Pastoral and agro-pastoral
opportunity space
life course
youth programming
livelihood
Development Studies
title Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
title_full Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
title_fullStr Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
title_full_unstemmed Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
title_short Taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously: implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
title_sort taking youth aspirations in agriculture seriously implications for livelihood programming in a fragile ecosystem
topic Pastoral and agro-pastoral
opportunity space
life course
youth programming
livelihood
Development Studies
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2473641
work_keys_str_mv AT jemalyhassen takingyouthaspirationsinagricultureseriouslyimplicationsforlivelihoodprogramminginafragileecosystem
AT getachewsendris takingyouthaspirationsinagricultureseriouslyimplicationsforlivelihoodprogramminginafragileecosystem
AT mulukengwordofa takingyouthaspirationsinagricultureseriouslyimplicationsforlivelihoodprogramminginafragileecosystem
AT chanyalewsaweke takingyouthaspirationsinagricultureseriouslyimplicationsforlivelihoodprogramminginafragileecosystem
AT jeylanwhussein takingyouthaspirationsinagricultureseriouslyimplicationsforlivelihoodprogramminginafragileecosystem
AT leulseggedkasa takingyouthaspirationsinagricultureseriouslyimplicationsforlivelihoodprogramminginafragileecosystem