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West African Youth Challenges and Opportunity Pathways

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Edited by

Mora L. McLean

west african youth challenges and opportunity pathways

GENDER AND CULTURAL STUDIES IN

AFRICA AND THE DIASPORA

Gender and Cultural Studies in Africa and the

Diaspora

Series Editor

Oyeronke?Oyewumi

Bayonne,?NJ,?USA

This book series spotlights the experiences of Africans on the continent and in its multiple and multilayered diasporas. Its objective is to make available publications that focus on people of African descent wherever they are located, ratgeting innovative research that derives questions, con- cepts, and theories from historical and contemporary experiences. The broad scope of the series includes gender scholarship as well as studies that engage with culture in all its complexities. From a variety of disciplinary, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary orientations, these studies engage current debates, address urgent questions, and open up new perspectives in African knowledge production.

More information about this series at

http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14996

Mora L. McLean

Editor

West African Youth

Challenges and

Opportunity Pathways

Gender and Cultural Studies in Africa and the Diaspora ISBN 978-3-030-21091-5 ISBN 978-3-030-21092-2 (eBook) © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2020 This book is an open access publication. Open Access This book is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution

4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits

use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this book are included in the book's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the book's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specic statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the pub- lisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institu- tional afliations. This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature

Switzerland AG.

The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland

Editor

Mora L. McLean

Rutgers University-Newark

Newark, NJ, USA

v This book is a result of a transatlantic, transnational collaboration that brought together researchers and practitioners who focus on youth in and from West Africa. The collaboration, dubbed the Forum on Expanding Youth Learning and Opportunity Pathways in, and Linked to, West Africa (the Forum), facilitated the sharing of research and practical approaches with potential applicability across the multiple and varied geographic spaces that African and African-descendant youth occupy. The Association for Research on Civil Society in Africa (AROCSA) and Rutgers University- Newark issued a joint call for proposals in the winter of 2016, which was followed up in April of 2017 with a small convening at the University of Ghana Business School (UGBS) in Legon. The event was co-sponsored by the University of Ghana Business School (UGBS) Department of Public Administration and Health Services Management, the Rutgers University- Newark Graduate School, and Joseph C.?Cornwall Center for Metropolitan Studies. A second gathering, designed as a workshop for this book's con- tributing authors, took place in Accra in October of 2018. The Forum explicitly aspired toward transcending the boundaries of academic disciplines, theory and practice, and geography—an impossibly demanding set of goals, given impetus by a sense of urgency to advance two overarching concerns: First, the Forum organizers perceived a need to bring theory and practice to bear on the topic simultaneously, by bringing academic researchers and scholars in closer dialogue with practitioners afliated with youth-focused nongovernmental nonprot organizations. Second, the organizers also envisioned the Forum as a vehicle for spurring new research on youthhood experiences and exploration of practical

PREFACE

vi PREFACE approaches, with potential applicability in and outside the West Africa region, especially in the United States. The Forum fell short of its ambitious agenda in several key respects. The call for proposals did not account sufciently for language barriers, so that the Forum did not draw participants from Francophone and Lusophone West Africa. Also missing were scholars, activists, and practi- tioners whose work centered on youth with disabilities and youth with LGBTQ identities. The organizers also grossly underestimated the com- plexity and difculty of bridging the gap between praxis and theory. However, three intended features of the Forum endured and reected in this collection. First, it sheds light on data, analyses, and insights pro- vided by researchers, activists, and practitioners spanning multiple aca- demic disciplines and both the nonprot nongovernmental organization (NGO) and for-prot business sectors. Second, while there are hints of the enduring developmentalist framework that tends to serve as the dominant justication for examining issues pertaining to African youth (most nota- bly in multilateral institution studies and reports), on the whole, the col- lection avoids approaching its subject from a development vantage point. The third feature is the purposeful examination of comparisons with, and linkages to, youth in continental and “New World" diasporas, within and outside West Africa—specically the Central African region, South Africa, and the postindustrial City of Newark, New Jersey in the northeastern United States. The book aims to reach a wide audience, including policy- makers, while increasing the scholarly appetite for more research-praxis exchange and comparative research on youth in Africa and in the

African diaspora.

The contributing authors come from a variety of backgrounds, includ- ing academia and research and public policy, social justice activism, and business entrepreneurship. When the Forum was launched, most of the researchers and scholars in the group were at early stages in their academic and professional careers. This was another distinctive feature of the Forum, which aimed to provide a platform for lesser-known and new voices. The majority of the contributors originate from, or are based in, West Africa. The authors share an abiding interest in understanding the factors that impede the social mobility and well-being of youth and nding ways to address and remove those barriers.

Newark, NJ Mora?L.?McLean

vii This edited collection, and the convening of practitioners and scholars that inspired it (the Forum), were made possible by a grant from the Ford Foundation. I am grateful not only for the foundation's nancial support, but also for the encouragement and insightful feedback provided through- out the project journey by Innocent Chukwuma and Dabesaki Mac- Ikemenjima of the foundation's West Africa ofce in Lagos. I am especially grateful to the Rutgers University-Newark community, which enabled both the book and activities surrounding it, in the rst instance. Enormous thanks are due to Irene O'Brien, who appreciated my calling and intellectual commitment to work in the borderlands between local and global inequality, and thanks also to Kyle Farmbry and Oliver Quinn, who entrusted me to lead the project that yielded this book. The transatlantic discussions and essential hands-on collaboration involved along the way simply would not have happened without Kimaada Sills, Mahako Etta, and Michael Simmons, my fellow project team members. They embraced the project vision from the outset, helped to ne tune it, and undertook the organizational tasks, big and small, to realize its transi- tion from a mere idea to a concrete initiative. Kimaada Sills is in a league of her own: she maintained deft oversight of the project administration from inception to completion. I owe her and Irene Welch a special debt of gratitude for skillfully managing the intricate travel arrangements and other logistics that, on two separate occasions, brought together participants from four countries and two continents. The project beneted tremendously from input from Rutgers University- Newark graduate students: Alice Benishyaka contributed yeowoman

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS service at the inaugural project gathering in Accra, Lauren Kaplan and Mi Hyun Yoon helped to research the literature, and Yvan Yenda weighed in insightfully on the project design. Three other key members of the broader Rutgers University network gave me condence that the idea for the Forum was feasible and worth pursuing. Kevin Lyons, Rutgers Business School Professor, introduced me to the innovative work of young, largely unsung, African social entrepre- neurs. Carolyn Brown, Professor of History and a member of the Center for African Studies (CAS) at Rutgers University-New Brunswick, inspired me with her work on Global Timbuktu, a multidimensional project that brought together high school students and teachers and academic scholars from Mali, New?York, and New Jersey to examine the place of Timbuktu, Mali in the history, culture, and imagination of Africa and its global diaspora. I was also both inspired guided by Cati Coe, Professor of Anthropology at Rutgers University-Camden. Author of a groundbreak- ing study of the transnational parenting strategies of Ghanaian parents based in the United States, Professor Coe could not have been more gra- cious and generous in responding to my many requests for help with iden- tifying emergent scholars interested in exploring new angles on topics related to West African youth. Her intellectual commitment to analyzing how inequality manifests in people's lives is at least equaled by her gener- osity and insight. I am honored as well as deeply grateful to have beneted from her advice on this project. The Association for Research on Civil Society in Africa (AROCSA) and the University of Ghana Business School (UGBS) were indispensable part- ners in the true sense of the word. AROCSA's network afforded a robust response to the Forum's 2016 call for proposals. The Forum's success in sustaining the avid engagement of researchers and practitioners from dif- ferent disciplines and sectors in deep discussion over several days is due in no small part to Esi Ansah's insightful guidance on the agenda and format. She, along with Sabina Akwei Yaboah, facilitated contacts with key indi- viduals and contributed to our warm welcome in Accra. That welcome was made complete by Justice Bawole and Betty Brew at UGBS, our other institutional partner and co-host of the rst convening in Accra. The UGBS campus-based conference facilities at Legon provided a collegial setting for the discussion and debate. Shara Davis, Kusum Mundra, Adrienne Petty, Robin Semple, and two anonymous readers contributed immeasurably with their careful reading of portions of the book manuscript and helpful comments at various ix ACKNOWLEDGMENTS stages. The process of editing this book gave new meaning to the phrase, “The devil is in the detail." At different stages, I had the great fortune of being helped by Natasha Gordon Chipbembere and Courtney Kelsch Ward, two superb copy editors who caught every glitch, while never fail- ing to keep our work to complete the book on track. Last but far from least, my heartfelt appreciation goes to the contribut- ing authors—for the chapters that comprise this book, and especially their ongoing efforts to both illuminate and address the concerns of West African and African-descendant youth. This book is dedicated to every young person on the African continent and in its diasporas, especially Oluwatimileyin and Oluwatomiwa Adeyemi, Kora and Kyle Koker, and my beloved, Atinuke McLean Lardner. xi

CONTENTS

1 Introduction 1

Mora L. McLean

Part I Migration 25

2 Education for All: The Case of Out-of- School Migrants in

Ghana 27

Daniel Owusu Kyereko

3 Irregular Migration as Survival Strategy: Narratives from

Youth in Urban Nigeria 53

Lanre Olusegun Ikuteyijo

4 Untold Stories: Newark's Burgeoning West African

Population and the In-School Experiences of African

Immigrant Youth 79

Michael Simmons and Mahako Etta

Part II Agency and Aspirations 101

xii

5 "To Become Somebody in the Future": Exploring the

Content of University Students' Goals in Nigeria 103

Dabesaki Mac-Ikemenjima

6 Making Lives, Making Communities: Deaf Youth in

Benin 131

Carsten Mildner

7 Someone Has to Tell These Children: "You Can Be As

Good As Anybody!" 157

Cecilia Fiaka

8 The Limits of Individual-Level Factors for Ghanaian and

South African Girls' Learning 171

Sally A. Nuamah

Part III Vulnerability and Well-Being 185

9 Youth Employment and Labor Market Vulnerability in

Ghana: Aggregate Trends and Determinants 187

Adedeji Adeniran, Joseph Ishaku, and Adekunle Yusuf

10 The Role of "eTrash2Cash" in Curtailing "Almajiri"

Vulnerability in Nigeria Through Waste Management

Social Micro- entrepreneurship 213

Alh. Muhammad Salisu Abdullahi

11 Burden, Drivers, and Impacts of Poor Mental Health in

Young People of West and Central Africa: Implications for Research and Programming 233 Kenneth Juma, Frederick Murunga Wekesah, Caroline W.

Kabiru, and Chimaraoke O. Izugbara

Index 267

CONTENTS

xiii Alh.MuhammadSalisuAbdullahi is the Founder and Chief Executive Ofcer of Haleematus Sa'adiyya Enterprises in Nigeria. A recipient of the

2016 Mandela Washington Fellowship and an Associate Fellow of the

Nigeria Leadership Initiative, he unveiled eTrash2Cash (www.eTrash-

2Cash.com) as a platform to reach the most economically disadvantaged

young people, the Almajiri people, aged 12 to 26?in the northern part of

Nigeria.

AdedejiAdeniran, PhD is a senior research fellow at the Centre for the Study of Economies of Africa (CSEA), an economics think tank based in Abuja, Nigeria, responsible for leading the research team on Program Evaluation and Poverty Analysis. His research interests include public choice economics, poverty, vulnerability analysis, and Education

Economics.

MahakoEtta is a doctoral candidate at the Rutgers University-Newark School of Public Affairs and Administration and former Program Manager of the Newark City of Learning Collaborative, a postsecondary attainment initiative under the auspices of Rutgers University-Newark, Joseph C.?Cornwall Center for Metropolitan Studies in Newark, New Jersey, USA. Cecilia Fiaka is the Founder and Director of the Nneka Youth Foundation, an NGO in Ghana. She holds an MBA in Project Management and a BSc in Human Resource Management, both from the University of Ghana Business School, Legon. Nneka Youth Foundation offers life

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

xiv NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS changing opportunities to youth, especially girls and young women, in rural, less privileged areas, through summer camps, educational and social orientation seminars, and other activities designed to tap into the creativity of young people. She published her memoir, Tideless Sea, in 2012 to raise seed money for her foundation. LanreOlusegunIkuteyijo, PhD is a senior lecturer and researcher in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria. His research interests include migration, urbaniza- tion, and community policing. He was a visiting researcher to the Department of History, McMaster University, Canada under the auspices of the Center for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Waterloo, Canada. Ikuteyijo has received a number of academic grants, including research grants from the Qualitative Research Network Africa and the Council for Development of Social Research in Africa (CODESRIA). JosephIshaku is a research associate at the Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa (CSEA), an economics think tank based in Abuja, Nigeria. His research interests include economics of education and sus- tainable development. ChimaraokeO.Izugbara, PhD is Director of the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW), and a professor-at-large at the School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. He previ- ously directed the Population Dynamics and Reproductive Health Research Program at the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) in Nairobi, Kenya. His research focuses on youth development, sexuality, and sexual and reproductive health. Kenneth Juma is an epidemiologist, a research ofcer at the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) in Nairobi, Kenya, and a doctoral candidate at the School of Medicine, Makerere University, Uganda. Kenneth's research interests are in non-communicable diseases including mental health, young people's health and wellbeing (includ- ing sexual and reproductive health), as well as maternal health issues in low resourced settings. CarolineW.Kabiru, PhD is an associate with the Population Council, Kenya, and currently serves as the Senior Technical Advisor for the Evidence to End FGM/C Research Consortium. Prior to joining the Council, Caroline worked as a research scientist with the African Population xv NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS and Health Research Center (APHRC). Her research interests center on issues related to young people's health and wellbeing. Daniel Owusu Kyereko is a doctoral student with the Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies (BIGSAS), University of Bayreuth, Germany. His research interests center on migration within the global south, inclusion, and issues of education and marginalization. His current research project is on the inclusion of international migrants and education in Ghana. Dabesaki Mac-Ikemenjima, PhD is a program ofcer at the Ford Foundation ofce for West Africa in Lagos where he leads the Foundation's Youth Transitions program. His work includes supporting efforts aimed at developing successful models for the path from education to employment for youth. MoraL.McLean is principal investigator for the 2017-2018 Forum on Expanding Youth Learning and Opportunity Pathways in, and Linked to, West Africa, designed, with support from the Ford Foundation, to facili- tate collaboration between practitioners and researchers concerned about the well-being of West African and African descendant youth. Between

2015 and 2018 she was a senior fellow with the Joseph C. Cornwall

Center for Metropolitan Studies at Rutgers University-Newark. She is president emerita of the Africa-America Institute (AAI), the oldest US-based nonprot devoted to expanding educational opportunities for

Africans.

Carsten Mildner holds a Master of Science degree in Anthropology from Copenhagen University and is a doctoral candidate at the Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies (BIGSAS) in Bayreuth, Germany. Having done applied work in the elds of inclusion and acces- sibility in arts, theater, and higher education, his research interests include deafness, disability, dynamics of identity, and the anthropology of the body. He has conducted eld research in Mali, Uganda, Germany, and Benin. SallyA.Nuamah, PhD is a professor in the School of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern University. She is the author of How Girls

Achieve (Harvard University Press, 2019).

MichaelSimmons, PhD is Senior Program Manager with the Rutgers University-Newark, Joseph C.?Cornwall Center for Metropolitan Studies xvi NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS in Newark, New Jersey, USA, responsible for youth crime and delinquency programs aimed at strengthening supportive services to young adults dis- connected from educational and employment opportunities, addressing place-based crime and safety issues, and improving the life chances of males of color. FrederickMurungaWekesah is an epidemiologist, a Research Ofcer at APHRC, and a doctoral candidate at the Julius Global Health, Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Center of Utrecht University, the Netherlands. Frederick carries out research in non-communicable diseases, specically on cardiovascular diseases, and on child and adolescent mental health. AdekunleYusuf is a research associate at the Centre for the Study of Economies of Africa (CSEA), an economics think tank based in Abuja,

Nigeria.

xvii Fig. 4.1 Recent trends in region and country of birth for Newark immigrants 86

Fig. 4.2 Immigration in Newark's neighborhoods 87

Fig. 4.3 Region of birth in Newark's neighborhoods 88 Fig. 4.4 Newark communities with the highest percentage of African immigrants: percentage of total population (Data from the United States Census Bureau accessed on the Statistical Atlas (2018) website in April of 2018) 88 Fig. 9.1 Labor participation and employment-population in Ghana,

2008-2017 (Source: World Bank, 2018) 194

Fig. 9.2 Unemployment rate in Ghana, 2008-2017 (Source: World Bank,

2018) 195

Fig. 9.3 Vulnerable employment in Ghana, 2008-2017 (Source: World

Bank, 2018) 196

LIST OF FIGURES

xix Table 2.1 Country of origin of out-of-school migrants 33 Table 2.2 Country of origin of parents with out-of-school children 34

Table 4.1 US foreign-born immigrant population 82

Table 5.1 Demographic characteristics of survey respondents 113 Table 5.2 Descriptive statistics of goal importance items (in order of importance) 117 Table 9.1 A snapshot of youth demographic prole 193

Table 9.2 Vulnerability probability by gender 202

Table 9.3 Vulnerability probability by location 203 Table 9.4 Vulnerability probability by education 205 Table 9.5 Vulnerability probability by industry of employment 205 Table 9.6 Multiple logistic regression of labor market vulnerability equation for various age cohorts in Ghana (dependent variable: vulnerability) 207 Table 11.1 Prevalence of mental and substance use disorders among young people in WCA 238 Table 11.2 Mental health care services in select WCA countries 245

LIST OF TABLES

1© The?Author(s) 2020

M. L. McLean (ed.), West African Youth Challenges and Opportunity Pathways, Gender and?Cultural Studies in?Africa and the?Diaspora, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-21092-2_1

CHAPTER 1

Introduction

MoraL.McLean

The West African youth presence in the American postindustrial port City of Newark, New Jersey, is signicant, varied, and intricately woven into the social fabric, in both present-day and historic terms. The outwardly seam- less integration of these young Black immigrants into Newark's residential, social, and commercial life belies the distinctive circumstances under which they have arrived, kinds and levels of resources upon which they can draw, and pathways available to them as they endeavor to thrive. For instance, in

2010, under the headline “Held as slaves, now free," CNN reported the

crackdown of a highly protable child trafcking operation in the Newark Metropolitan Area. Some 20 girls, most in their early teens, from various West African countries, testied to being held captive by a Togolese cou- ple, who tricked them into traveling to the United States on the promise of an education, then forced them to work 14- to 16-hour?days in hair braiding salons, boasting a largely African American clientele (Bronstein, Lyon, & Poolos, 2010; Salomon, 2010). Speaking before the thousands who attended Rutgers University-Newark's, 2018 commencement, the then undergraduate student body president reected on the travails and triumphs of transitioning from her birthplace in Nigeria to life in New

M. L. McLean ()

Rutgers University-Newark, Newark, NJ, USA

e-mail: m.mclean@rutgers.edu 2 Jersey, and how the iconic image of Queen Latifah—the rapper, song- writer, actor, producer, and Newark native—inspired her to persevere. Offering words of encouragement to many in the audience, she pro- nounced: “To every black girl who has ever felt undeserving, underesti- mated, unworthy, this is for you!" (Rutgers University-Newark, 2018). In

2019, the New Jersey Historical Commission awarded support for the

work of a young Ghanaian-born researcher who is using archived “fugitive slave" advertisements to document the enslavement of African people throughout the state of New Jersey in the period between 1783, the of- cial end of the American Revolution, and 1808, when the US government ofcially banned American participation in the transatlantic slave trade (Amemasor, 2002). The seeds of his passion for probing this history took root after he earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Cape Coast, and took on a rst job educating visitors to Ghana's Cape Coast Castle Museum—established at the infamous seventeenth-century fortress and slave trading post. After going on to earn a doctoral degree from Rutgers University-Newark, he shifted the focus of his passion for probing this history to the US side of the Atlantic. In the spring of 2016, the Joseph C.?Cornwall Center for Metropolitan Studies (Cornwall Center) at Rutgers University-Newark announced the results of research showing an exceptional increase in the African-born immigrant portion of the Newark's majority Black population. The nd- ings conrmed that Newark's majority Black (48.7%) and Hispanic (34.4%) population is complexly diverse. Members include descendants of families who were part of the Great Migration—the twentieth-centuryquotesdbs_dbs25.pdfusesText_31
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