Graduate unemployment, artisanal and small-scale mining, and rural transformation in Ghana: What does the 'educated' youth involvement offer?

被引:30
作者
Arthur-Holmes, Francis [1 ]
Busia, Kwaku Abrefa [1 ]
Vazquez-Brust, Diego Alfonso [2 ]
Yakovleva, Natalia [3 ]
机构
[1] Lingnan Univ, Dept Sociol & Social Policy, Tuen Mun, 8 Castle Peak Rd, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Portsmouth Univ, Portsmouth Business Sch, Portsmouth PO1 2UP, England
[3] Kedge Business Sch, 40 Ave Terroirs France, F-75012 Paris, France
关键词
Graduate unemployment; Artisanal and Small-scale mining (ASM); Rural transformation; Educated youth; Entrepreneurship; Africa; SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA; LIVELIHOOD DIVERSIFICATION; FORMALIZATION; POVERTY; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; PARTICIPATION; PERSPECTIVES; COMMUNITIES; CHALLENGES; CONFLICT;
D O I
10.1016/j.jrurstud.2022.08.002
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
In the face of rising graduate unemployment, an increasing number of graduates in Ghana has joined the arti-sanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector. Hitherto, graduates were reluctant to take up jobs in ASM let alone move into rural areas to engage in ASM. In light of these ongoing employment dynamics, we investigate the reasons why educated youth in Ghana join the ASM sector by using digital interviewing methods (2 phone and 17 WhatsApp instant messenger interviews). Further, we examine how university graduates' involvement in ASM transforms the rural communities they work in and how they are in turn shaped by the communities. These rural transformations have important policy considerations for this distinct youth group due to their 'non-typical' association as ASM workers and how formalisation within the sector can increase the gains they actualise from the sector as a source of employment. We find that most university graduates join ASM because of four reasons: 1) ASM serves as a primary livelihood source because of lack of alternatives, 2) lack of employment opportunities (graduate positions) in the cities, 3) for income diversification, and 4) opportunity to start a business in a profitable sector/higher remuneration in ASM compared to other employment sectors. Among other things, graduates' involvement in ASM transforms rural communities in the following ways: 1) reconfiguring the spatial mobilities of graduate employment avenues towards rural areas, 2) promoting locally-anchored community development, 3) stimulating local economy through linkages to other sectors/industries, and 4) influencing rural labour dynamics in ASM communities. Given these dynamics of rural transformation, educated youth involve-ment in ASM questions the singular conceptualisation of ASM as 'a poverty-driven activity' and helps scholars to reconceptualise and recontextualise ASM considering the view of ASM as an 'entrepreneurial activity', and 'a community activity' for traditional authorities to generate funds for local development. The policy implications of our findings on the formalisation of ASM and the promotion of youth employment in the ASM sector in Ghana and potentially, elsewhere in Africa are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:125 / 139
页数:15
相关论文
共 107 条
  • [1] Abubukar M.Y., 2020, SCI RES J, V8, P106
  • [2] Governance challenges of small-scale gold mining in Ghana: Insights from a process net-map study
    Adu-Baffour, Ferdinand
    Daum, Thomas
    Birner, Regina
    [J]. LAND USE POLICY, 2021, 102
  • [3] African Union, 2009, AFR MIN VIS
  • [4] ARTISANAL AND SMALL-SCALE MINING AS AN INFORMAL SAFETY NET: EVIDENCE FROM TANZANIA
    Aizawa, Yoshio
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, 2016, 28 (07) : 1029 - 1049
  • [5] App-based textual interviews: interacting with younger generations in a digitalized social reality
    Anderdal Bakken, Silje
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2023, 26 (06) : 631 - 644
  • [6] [Anonymous], 2013, Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining [Text/HTML]
  • [7] [Anonymous], 2006, AFR YOUTH CHART
  • [8] [Anonymous], 2011, Minerals and Africas Development Report
  • [9] Appiah H, 1998, J S AFR I MIN METALL, V98, P307
  • [10] Examining subsector-based inequalities in health, safety and environmental conditions of gold miners in Ghana
    Aram, Simon Appah
    Lartey, Patrick Osei
    Amoah, Samuel Kofi
    Appiah, Augustine
    [J]. SAFETY SCIENCE, 2021, 142 (142)