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AIDS-affected young people’s access to livelihood assets: Exploring ‘new variant famine’ in rural southern Africa
Abstract The ‘new variant famine’ hypothesis suggests AIDS is contributing to food insecurity in southern Africa. Proposed causal mechanisms include a loss of livelihood assets and skills, brought about through AIDS′ impacts on children’s access to inherited property and intergenerationally-transferred knowledge. This paper employs a sustainable livelihoods framework to examine how AIDS is impacting on young people’s access to assets and skills in two southern African countries: Malawi and Lesotho. Drawing on qualitative research with rural youth, the paper shows that AIDS affects some young people’s access to some livelihood assets, but does not do so in a systematic or predictable way, nor are its impacts invariably negative. The broader cultural and institutional context is of key importance. The paper also demonstrates the need for the sustainable livelihoods framework to take greater account of the temporalities of livelihoods, and in particular the significance of lifecourse and generation.
Highlights The New Variant Famine hypothesis attributes southern Africa’s food crises to AIDS. It suggests AIDS reduces young people’s access to livelihood assets. Qualitative research with rural youth in Malawi and Lesotho reveals greater complexity. AIDS has some impact on youth access to livelihood assets but this is not systematic. The Sustainable Livelihoods Framework should incorporate lifecourse and generation.
AIDS-affected young people’s access to livelihood assets: Exploring ‘new variant famine’ in rural southern Africa
Abstract The ‘new variant famine’ hypothesis suggests AIDS is contributing to food insecurity in southern Africa. Proposed causal mechanisms include a loss of livelihood assets and skills, brought about through AIDS′ impacts on children’s access to inherited property and intergenerationally-transferred knowledge. This paper employs a sustainable livelihoods framework to examine how AIDS is impacting on young people’s access to assets and skills in two southern African countries: Malawi and Lesotho. Drawing on qualitative research with rural youth, the paper shows that AIDS affects some young people’s access to some livelihood assets, but does not do so in a systematic or predictable way, nor are its impacts invariably negative. The broader cultural and institutional context is of key importance. The paper also demonstrates the need for the sustainable livelihoods framework to take greater account of the temporalities of livelihoods, and in particular the significance of lifecourse and generation.
Highlights The New Variant Famine hypothesis attributes southern Africa’s food crises to AIDS. It suggests AIDS reduces young people’s access to livelihood assets. Qualitative research with rural youth in Malawi and Lesotho reveals greater complexity. AIDS has some impact on youth access to livelihood assets but this is not systematic. The Sustainable Livelihoods Framework should incorporate lifecourse and generation.
AIDS-affected young people’s access to livelihood assets: Exploring ‘new variant famine’ in rural southern Africa
Ansell, Nicola (author) / Hajdu, Flora (author) / van Blerk, Lorraine (author) / Robson, Elsbeth (author)
Journal of Rural Studies ; 46 ; 23-34
2016-05-22
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Children , HIV , Livelihoods , Rural , Youth , Southern Africa
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