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Climate Change and Young People in Uganda: A Literature Review

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Barford, A 
Magimbi, P 

Abstract

jats:p The disruptions of anthropogenic climate change are increasingly severe. People living in sub-Saharan Africa are especially exposed to these risks, and amongst them young people. It is well established that climate disruptions have the potential to halt education, displace populations, and wreck infrastructure. This rigorous literature review focuses on climate change in the landlocked East African country of Uganda, demographically the world’s third youngest country, where young people struggle to get by due to insufficient work opportunities. Extended to other countries in the Eastern and Central African region, the review considers what is known about the intersection of youth livelihoods and climate change; young people’s susceptibility to climate disruption due to limited resources and livelihood options; and the constraints around their responses. The review findings suggest the need for substantial youth informed interventions to bolster young people’s economic resilience and adaptive capacity given the worsening climate change and prolonged population growth. </jats:p>

Description

Keywords

youth, livelihoods, work, policy, Africa, environment, activism

Journal Title

Journal of Environment and Development

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1070-4965
1552-5465

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications
Sponsorship
British Academy (YH\190029)
British Academy Youth Futures Programme