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A Sustainable Livelihoods Approach and Economic Strengthening for Youth IRC Liberia - Nimba & Lofa October 4, 2006 Lili Stern, Technical Advisor for Youth.

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Presentation on theme: "A Sustainable Livelihoods Approach and Economic Strengthening for Youth IRC Liberia - Nimba & Lofa October 4, 2006 Lili Stern, Technical Advisor for Youth."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Sustainable Livelihoods Approach and Economic Strengthening for Youth IRC Liberia - Nimba & Lofa October 4, 2006 Lili Stern, Technical Advisor for Youth & Livelihoods IRC New York - CYPD Radha Rajkotia, Youth & Livelihoods Technical Advisor Child & Youth Protection and Development Unit International Rescue Committee

2 Starting from the beginning… What is a ‘livelihood’? ‘A livelihood comprises the capabilities, assets and activities required for a means of living’ What is a ‘sustainable livelihood’? ‘A livelihood is sustainable when it can cope with and recover from stresses and shocks, maintain or enhance its capabilities and assets…’ (Chambers and Conway, 1992)

3 What is the sustainable livelihoods framework?

4 What have we learned about the SL framework? Limited practical assistance for application Non-sectoral approach does not match reality Downplayed importance of focused technical/ financial support services, increased emphasis on ‘soft’ issues e.g. capacity-building, social organization, participation Very useful as conceptual or heuristic tool Helps to see links between different factors affecting livelihoods Helps build cross-sectoral and potentially, cross- institutional dialogue

5 So, what about youth in conflict/ post- conflict settings? Scale Sub-Saharan African youth population has quadrupled since 1950 (World Bank, 2006) In 2005, 62% of Africa’s population fell below 25 (World Bank, 2009) 60% of total Sub-Saharan unemployed population are youth (ILO, 2006) 4.5 million unemployed youth in Côte d’Ivoire (UNIDO, 2007) 48,000 child soldiers in Sierra Leone, including approximately 12,000 girls (McKay & Mazurana, 2004) 88% youth unemployment in Liberia (ILO, 2006) 7,000-9,000 children and youth involved in commercial sexual exploitation in Uganda (ILO-IPEC, 2004) Half of FATA’s 3.5 million population is female, but female literacy rate stands at 3% (DfID, 2003)

6 Crisis to Development Jobs Complex puzzles of youth needs/assets Skills Knowledge Social networks Family/ community reintegration Financial services Access to natural/ physical resources Confidence Advice Trauma counseling Healthcare Access to justice Access to markets Rights education

7 Crisis to Development Jobs How youth needs/ assets are frequently prioritized Skills Knowledge Social networks Family/ community reintegration Financial services Access to natural/ physical resources ConfidenceAdvice Trauma counseling Healthcare Access to justice Access to markets Rights education

8 Why so? Youth Experiences of trauma Need for change in behaviors Fractured community relationships – particularly inter- generational relationships Contexts Fragile peace- government and donor urgency Weak markets not able to absorb youth Poor capacity/ infrastructure In crisis/ immediate post-conflict…

9 BUT, this does change with time Does not mean that we have to be tunnel-visioned or short-sighted in our approach Need to explore interventions that are innovative and responsive to both needs and contexts Youth VSLA Groups (Burundi) Micro-franchising (Sierra Leone) Complementary education and employment programs e.g. youth agriculture extension (CAR) Mainstreamed entrepreneurship education (CdI, Sierra Leone, Liberia)

10 Need robust evaluations of youth livelihood programming – using same holistic approach as that is applied to design Northern Uganda – DoL funded ORACLE project (2003-2007) - Youth interviewed one year after leaving project 93% not involved in child labor 72% say life is better 77% say that they have more choices 67% have better community relations 56% making more money Burundi – VSLA and GBV impact evaluation


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