Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa

Climate change and youth participation are emerging as important clarion calls today. Indeed, very few individuals will possibly counter a call for the involvement of young people in decisions and actions which (in)directly affect their lives. Presently, some of the greatest social problems faced by...

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Main Author: Bright Nkrumah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2021-01-01
Series:International Journal of Ecology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8831677
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spelling doaj-5feb642c03ca47138dea1ff7cce9238a2021-02-22T00:01:18ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Ecology1687-97162021-01-01202110.1155/2021/8831677Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South AfricaBright Nkrumah0Global Change InstituteClimate change and youth participation are emerging as important clarion calls today. Indeed, very few individuals will possibly counter a call for the involvement of young people in decisions and actions which (in)directly affect their lives. Presently, some of the greatest social problems faced by young South Africans are COVID-19, employment, and climate change. These challenges require the active participation of young people—locally known as the “born frees”—in the construction and operationalization of interventions, especially in light of the insufficient (sub)national response. That being said, policymakers often adopt top-down over bottom-up approaches, with the young generation often excluded or at best given a tokenistic role in climate decision-making processes. Therefore, this paper suggests some new ways of conceptualizing youth agency and brings to light how the born frees could efficiently take part or have a say in negotiating the path to climate adaptation, resilience, and mitigation. By drawing from the existing literature, the paper concludes that effective engagement with youth is essential in empowering them to key stakeholders or partners in adapting and/or mitigating climate change.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8831677
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bright Nkrumah
spellingShingle Bright Nkrumah
Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa
International Journal of Ecology
author_facet Bright Nkrumah
author_sort Bright Nkrumah
title Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa
title_short Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa
title_full Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa
title_fullStr Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Tokenism: The “Born Frees” and Climate Change in South Africa
title_sort beyond tokenism: the “born frees” and climate change in south africa
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Ecology
issn 1687-9716
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Climate change and youth participation are emerging as important clarion calls today. Indeed, very few individuals will possibly counter a call for the involvement of young people in decisions and actions which (in)directly affect their lives. Presently, some of the greatest social problems faced by young South Africans are COVID-19, employment, and climate change. These challenges require the active participation of young people—locally known as the “born frees”—in the construction and operationalization of interventions, especially in light of the insufficient (sub)national response. That being said, policymakers often adopt top-down over bottom-up approaches, with the young generation often excluded or at best given a tokenistic role in climate decision-making processes. Therefore, this paper suggests some new ways of conceptualizing youth agency and brings to light how the born frees could efficiently take part or have a say in negotiating the path to climate adaptation, resilience, and mitigation. By drawing from the existing literature, the paper concludes that effective engagement with youth is essential in empowering them to key stakeholders or partners in adapting and/or mitigating climate change.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8831677
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