Skip to content

Home News & Insights

PRB Africa Highlights the Importance of Youth in Sustainable Development Work

Africa's development landscape is marked by a significant lack of representation from young professionals, said PRB's Africa Director

“Africa’s development landscape is marked by a significant lack of representation from young professionals,” PRB Africa Director Aïssata Fall said at the Women’s Economic Empowerment Convening, hosted by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, from September 23–25.

Fall’s remarks came during a discussion on the role of young advocates in the future of development in Africa, facilitated by PRB and joined by participants from ACED, ActionAid, Akina Mama wa Afrika, IDInsight, the International Center for Research on Women, and the CREG Center. While many organizations work with young people, they often involve them primarily as beneficiaries or targets, rather than empowering them as active professional technical assistants, Fall said.

This session sought an African perspective on young advocates’ employability in the development sector. Participants explored how to help young people access the development job market in Africa, highlighting their essential contribution and potential as key professionals driving change. They discussed the prerequisites for the effective integration of youth into the development labor market and how NGOs, through their professional role in technical assistance, can concretely contribute to the transition toward localization.

“By translating global agendas such as decent work and youth employability into our daily work, we can continue to contribute to a more inclusive, equitable, and sustainable development process,” Fall added.

Related Posts

  • Insights

post

America's Future: Latino Child Well-Being in Numbers and Trends

(April 2010) The demography of the United States is changing at an accelerated pace. Over the past 20 years, the number of Latino children under age 18 living in the United States has doubled, making them one of the fastest-growing segments of the national population.

  • Insights

post

Poverty Is a Persistent Reality for Many Rural Children in U.S.

(2009) Although child poverty conjures up an urban image for most Americans, one-fifth of children in poverty live in rural areas. Poverty rates are higher for rural than for urban children, and the gap has increased in recent years.