Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Reaping Morocco’s Demographic Dividend: Lessons from Sub-Saharan Africa
- Chapter 2 Social Media as a Weapon: How the Youth in Rio de Janeiro’s Favelas Fight Police Violence
- Chapter 3 Mobilising Human Capital to Harness the Demographic Dividend: The Role of the Diaspora as Actors of Change in the Gambia
- Chapter 4 Engaging Youth to Address Sexual Violence in India
- Chapter 5 Putting the African Girl at the Centre of Demographic Change Programmes
- Chapter 6 From Incarceration to Transformation: Ex-Gang Members as Actors of Change in Los Angeles
- Chapter 7 African Continental Youth Policy as a Tool for Harnessing the Demographic Dividend
- Chapter 8 Digital Mindfulness for Indian Millennials
- Chapter 9 Lessons from Africa: What Can a Community of Pastoralists Offer the International Cooperation Community?
- Chapter 10 Revisiting Democracy: Intersectionality, Youth and the Imperative of ‘Climate Justice’ – Sardinia’s ‘Europe Day’
- Acknowledgements
- Index
Chapter 9 - Lessons from Africa: What Can a Community of Pastoralists Offer the International Cooperation Community?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Reaping Morocco’s Demographic Dividend: Lessons from Sub-Saharan Africa
- Chapter 2 Social Media as a Weapon: How the Youth in Rio de Janeiro’s Favelas Fight Police Violence
- Chapter 3 Mobilising Human Capital to Harness the Demographic Dividend: The Role of the Diaspora as Actors of Change in the Gambia
- Chapter 4 Engaging Youth to Address Sexual Violence in India
- Chapter 5 Putting the African Girl at the Centre of Demographic Change Programmes
- Chapter 6 From Incarceration to Transformation: Ex-Gang Members as Actors of Change in Los Angeles
- Chapter 7 African Continental Youth Policy as a Tool for Harnessing the Demographic Dividend
- Chapter 8 Digital Mindfulness for Indian Millennials
- Chapter 9 Lessons from Africa: What Can a Community of Pastoralists Offer the International Cooperation Community?
- Chapter 10 Revisiting Democracy: Intersectionality, Youth and the Imperative of ‘Climate Justice’ – Sardinia’s ‘Europe Day’
- Acknowledgements
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In conceptualising this chapter, we have had to recognise that while joint authorship of a chapter usually suggests the writers have an ongoing dialogue arising out of common reading and discussions, this was clearly not the case between us. We live and work on two different continents; our training and backgrounds differ; and our work experience is diverse. And yet, despite these differences, we share common insights. We are guided by the common belief that to be successful in delivering development in Africa, the international community has to move beyond Western conceptual frames and embrace the sociocultural institutions and practices that have enabled Africans to survive for centuries.
There are many reasons for our collaboration on this chapter. One is to make visible the ‘other’, local, sociocultural processes that are becoming increasingly invisible as the Western world order appears to spread across the continent. Another is the optimistic belief that embracing these local sociocultural processes enables the building of stronger institutions and implementation of sustainable solutions. Our aim is twofold: first, to show that while invisible, it is these processes that often represent drivers of stability, development and sustainability; and second, to call for an increase in visibility and recognition, by connecting these processes with development efforts across the continent. It is our conviction that by recognising local sociocultural processes, we find new and more effective solutions to challenges such as population dynamics or protracted conflicts.
This chapter is informed by our basic understanding of inclusion as an approach that leads to ownership, innovation and sustainability. In the following pages, we start by examining the concepts of development cooperation and demographic transition as two basic elements of the process of ‘collaboration to achieve a demographic dividend’. We then present a case study of sociocultural practices of pastoral communities that have enabled them to retain stability and generate development for hundreds of years. We find the case of land governance among pastoralist communities to be illustrative of how local ways of life that support communities to be resilient could inspire a different approach to the development of population policy in order for the demographic dividend to have a chance to be realised.
Development Cooperation and the Aid System
Development cooperation is a phenomenon that has existed for decades, part of an international system that is yet to prove its resilience in global problem-solving.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Demographic Dividend and the Power of YouthVoices from the Global Diplomacy Lab, pp. 95 - 104Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2021