The Youth Bulge and National Security in Africa: A Ground-Level Analysis
Abstract
Current demographic and social trends in sub-Saharan Africa raise concern about the regionÕs youth bulge, i.e., the historically-large cohort of adolescents coming of age. Today, youth between the ages of 15-24 constitute 20% of SSAÕs total population. Their absolute count, nearing 200 millions, makes them the largest generation this region has ever had to raise. To both social scientists and policy planners in the region, this demographic trend represents both an opportunity and a risk. On the positive side, this largest generation could become AfricaÕs greatest generation. To achieve this happy scenario, the region must fully harness the energy and unique skills of this generation. Countries must help these youth smoothly enter adulthood and the labor market. If they do, the region could capture its so-called demographic dividend, i.e., the socioeconomic benefits expected from its current decline in birth rates and dependency ratios. However, raising, educating, and employing all the regionÕs youth is a daunting challenge in a context of limited opportunity and rapid social change. On the flip side, failure to integrate this large generation would severely compromise the regionÕs development prospects, and raise major security concerns. The concerns stem not simply from the large number of youth but from the facts that a) many of these youth are NEET (not in education, employment or training) and b) young adulthood is generally a time of risk-taking behavior. In short, todayÕs large youth cohorts can be a powerful catalyst of existing sources of violence. For these reasons, most African countries seek to capture their dividend and address their youth bulge. So far, much of the policy debate has revolved around economic dividends and a Òpoverty-violenceÓ narrative, i.e., countries must provide employment as a means to avert political violence. In this project, we expand the Òpoverty-violenceÓ narrative in two ways, as it relates to AfricaÕs youth bulge. First, we expand the spectrum of violence beyond/below extreme forms of overt physical violence directed at large groups and institutions (~terrorism). Instead, we also cover violence that is not a) physical in nature but social, psychological and economic, b) overt and dramatic but steady and insidious c) directed at others but self (suicide, substance abuse..). Even if these subtler forms are less dramatic than large-scale terrorist activity, they reinforce each other and all contribute to generalized insecurity. As a second expansion, we go beyond the focus on poverty and jobs. Instead, we raise the broader question of social integration and identity. The task, we argue, is not only to offer jobs but to integrate youth in rapidly changing societies marked by a breakdown of families, rapid urbanization, growing inequality and consumerism, or globalization. How the current generation of African youth broadly fit in this new world Ð will determine the stability and long-term security of African societies. The alienation or radicalization of youth is seen as a gradual process, with the demographic bulge turning into an economic bulge, then sociological, and finally, a political problem if the necessary steps are not taken to socially integrate youth.
Document Details
- Document Type
- DoD Grant Award
- Publication Date
- Oct 16, 2018
- Source ID
- W911NF1710029
Entities
People
- Parfait Eloundou-enyegue
Organizations
- Army Contracting Command
- Cornell University
- Office of the Secretary of Defense