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Investment guidelines for youth in agrifood systems in Africa









FAO and AUC. 2022. Investment guidelines for youth in agrifood systems in Africa. Rome.




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    Policy brief
    Scaling up investments in agrifood systems for youth in Africa
    What policymakers need to know
    2022
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    This investment brief highlights the importance of youth as change agents and key stakeholders contributing to sustainable agrifood systems. It provides an overview of the Investment guidelines for youth in agrifood systems in Africa developed jointly by FAO and the African Union Commission through a multi-stakeholder and participatory process. The guidelines aim to accelerate investments in and by youth in agrifood systems by providing practical guidance, including tools and examples, to design, develop, implement, monitor and evaluate youth-focused and youth-sensitive investment programmes and to engage youth fully as partners throughout the entire process. The brief calls for wide dissemination of the guidelines, capacity building of relevant stakeholders to apply them at national and local levels, and concerted and coordinated action to reach these goals.
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    Booklet
    Youth Inspiring Youth in Agriculture Initiative 2022
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    Since 2015, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has been implementing a global project titled Integrated Country Approach for Boosting Decent Jobs for Youth under the Agrifood System (ICA). The project aims to enhance decent jobs through the economic and social empowerment of rural youth by enhancing the enabling environment for youth agripreneurship. FAO, in collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries (MAAIF), launched the Youth Inspiring Youth in Agriculture Initiative (YIYA) in 2017. YIYA is a nationwide competition aimed at promoting youth employment in the agricultural sector by recognizing and supporting young agripreneurs, that are role models to their peers and are willing to work with and support other youth through knowledge-sharing, capacity building, and mentorship. The first cohort of youth champions (25), selected and awarded in 2017, received cash, technical training in different value chains, opportunities to exhibit their enterprises nationally and internationally, and participated in youth-focused policy dialogues on employment in agriculture. Based on the success of Round one of the YIYA initiative, FAO, MAAIF and partners embarked on a process to scale up the initiative into a national youth agripreneurs mentorship programme, to attract and inspire more young people to engage in the agriculture sector countrywide. In 2021, over 270 youth champions were selected from over 1 400 applications and 35 national youth champions were recognized and awarded with equipment, assets like animals, inputs and all of them have gained visibility and will further be supported to access opportunities.
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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Good practices - Integrated Country Approach (ICA) for boosting decent jobs for youth in the agrifood system
    Youth-inclusive policymaking: The National Strategy for Youth Employment in Agriculture (NSYEA) of Uganda
    2022
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    This document describe the good practice of a youth-inclusive policymaking process supported in Uganda between 2015 and 2022 under the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Integrated Country Approach (ICA) for boosting decent jobs for youth in the agrifood system. The document describes the different steps that led to the adoption of a youth-targeted strategy for employment in the agricultural sector in 2017 and the institutional mechanisms set to guarantee the active engagement of multiple stakeholders in the process, starting from the youth themselves. Specific success factors and lessons learned are also emphasized, including the role of FAO as neutral facilitator, the empowerment and active engagement of youth organizations and the need for adequate monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of policy frameworks and commitments. Finally, the documents suggests step-by-step tips for youth-inclusive policymaking around agrifood systems development that emerged from the Uganda experience, but are considered globally relevant and highly replicable.

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