Policy Briefing. Building Food Secure Rural Livelihoods with AIDS-affected Young People

Abstract

The 鈥楢verting New Variant Famine鈥� research project was undertaken to generate evidence of how AIDS, in interaction with other factors, is impacting on the livelihood activities, opportunities and choices of young people in rural southern Africa. The research, based in two case study villages, Nihelo in Malawi and Ha Rantelali in Lesotho, employed a range of methods. These included participatory activities with about eighty 10-24-year-olds that sought to explore their perceptions of the impacts of adult sickness and death on young people鈥檚 livelihoods, as well as individual life history interviews with more than forty 18-24-year-olds that charted influences on livelihoods. The policy recommendations presented here are also informed by information gathered through interviews with more than eighty policy makers and practitioners from government ministries, UN and donor agencies, parastatals and NGOs.

Citation

Averting 鈥楴ew Variant Famine鈥�, Policy Briefing August 2009, Brunel University, London, UK, 4 pp.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2009