Literature DB >> 25860524

Mismatches between youth aspirations and participatory HIV/AIDSprogrammes in South Africa.

Andrew Gibbs1, Catherine Campbell, Sbongile Maimane, Yugi Nair.   

Abstract

Although youth participation is a pillar of international HIV/AIDS policy, it is notoriously difficult to facilitate. We explore this challenge through a case study of a community-led HIV/AIDS management project in a South African rural area, in which anticipated youth participation failed to materialise. We take a social psychological view, examining ways in which opportunities offered by the project failed to resonate with the social identities and aspirations of local young people. Interviews and focus group discussions were conducted with 37 young people prior to the programme's establishment and with 21 young people four years later. In response to questions about what they wanted to achieve in life, the young people emphasized: career success through migrating to urban areas to seek education and paid work, non-tokenistic involvement in community affairs, and 'having fun.' We look at how the project unintentionally evolved in ways that undermined these goals. Its strong local focus was inappropriately tailored to young people whose views of the future focused on getting away to urban areas as quickly as possible. The volunteer nature of the work held little appeal for ambitious young people who instead saw paid work as their way out of poverty and were reluctant to take unpaid time out from schoolwork. The project failed to develop new and democratic ways of operating-quickly becoming mired in traditional, adult-dominated social relations, in which young people with initiative and independent views were sometimes belittled by adults as being 'smart' or 'clever.' Finally, the project's focus on sexual abstinence held little interest for young people who took an enthusiastic interest in sex. The article concludes with a discussion of the complexities of implementing youth-friendly projects in communities steeped in top-down adult-dominated social interactions, and recommends ways in which similar projects might seek to involve youths more effectively.

Entities:  

Keywords:  case studies; community management; community participation; interventions; rural communities; youth workers

Year:  2010        PMID: 25860524     DOI: 10.2989/16085906.2010.517482

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Afr J AIDS Res        ISSN: 1608-5906            Impact factor:   1.300


  7 in total

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Review 2.  Combined structural interventions for gender equality and livelihood security: a critical review of the evidence from southern and eastern Africa and the implications for young people.

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4.  Thetha Nami: participatory development of a peer-navigator intervention to deliver biosocial HIV prevention for adolescents and youth in rural South Africa.

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5.  An open debate about the object and purpose of global health knowledge in the context of an interdisciplinary research partnership on HIV/STI prevention priorities in Peru.

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6.  'Eh! I felt I was sabotaged!': facilitators' understandings of success in a participatory HIV and IPV prevention intervention in urban South Africa.

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7.  Directed and target focused multi-sectoral adolescent HIV prevention: Insights from implementation of the 'DREAMS Partnership' in rural South Africa.

Authors:  Natsayi Chimbindi; Isolde Birdthistle; Sian Floyd; Guy Harling; Nondumiso Mthiyane; Thembelihle Zuma; James R Hargreaves; Janet Seeley; Maryam Shahmanesh
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  7 in total

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