TY - CHAP
T1 - Schooling, Generation, and Transformations in Livelihoods
T2 - Youth in the Sand Economy of Northern Kenya
AU - Jordt Jørgensen, Nanna
PY - 2016/5/11
Y1 - 2016/5/11
N2 - In northern Kenya, sustainable pastoral livelihoods are under strain. While climate changes implicating more frequent and prolonged drought periods reduce pasture productivity, new political and economic interests in the region are generating a growing pressure on land. In Laikipia North subcounty, schooled young people increasingly turn to new livelihood activities, such as sand harvesting, to replace or complement pastoralism. This chapter explores how livelihood activities become controversial topics in schools and communities and discusses how generational relations are negotiated through learning and laboring. Through an analysis of the livelihood activities and narratives of young men involved in the sand economy, it is argued that school ideas and practices regarding labor and environment come to play a central part in generational negotiations and that these negotiations reflect young people’s attempts to carefully balance competing moral expectations and generational positions of autonomy and dependency. The chapter contributes to debates about young people’s learning and laboring in Africa by pointing to the ways in which embodied laboring practices and environmental learning processes, entangled in livelihood changes, are fundamentally tied to generational relations and interactions.
AB - In northern Kenya, sustainable pastoral livelihoods are under strain. While climate changes implicating more frequent and prolonged drought periods reduce pasture productivity, new political and economic interests in the region are generating a growing pressure on land. In Laikipia North subcounty, schooled young people increasingly turn to new livelihood activities, such as sand harvesting, to replace or complement pastoralism. This chapter explores how livelihood activities become controversial topics in schools and communities and discusses how generational relations are negotiated through learning and laboring. Through an analysis of the livelihood activities and narratives of young men involved in the sand economy, it is argued that school ideas and practices regarding labor and environment come to play a central part in generational negotiations and that these negotiations reflect young people’s attempts to carefully balance competing moral expectations and generational positions of autonomy and dependency. The chapter contributes to debates about young people’s learning and laboring in Africa by pointing to the ways in which embodied laboring practices and environmental learning processes, entangled in livelihood changes, are fundamentally tied to generational relations and interactions.
KW - schools, courses and institutions
KW - learning and laboring
KW - children and youth
KW - kenya
KW - generation
KW - research designs, theory and method
KW - anthropology
KW - livelihoods
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-4585-97-2_26-1
DO - 10.1007/978-981-4585-97-2_26-1
M3 - Contribution to book/anthology
VL - 10
T3 - Geographies of Children and Young People
SP - 1
EP - 21
BT - Labouring and Learning
PB - Springer
CY - Singapore
ER -