Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Reconceptualising temporality in young lives: exploring young people’s current and future livelihoods in AIDS-affected southern Africa

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dc.creator Ansell, N
dc.creator Hajdu, F
dc.creator van Blerk, L
dc.creator Robson, E
dc.date 2015-02-09T12:30:45Z
dc.date 2015-02-09T12:30:45Z
dc.date 2014
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-25T14:53:55Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-25T14:53:55Z
dc.identifier Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 39(2): 387– 401, (July 2014)
dc.identifier 0020-2754
dc.identifier http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tran.12041/abstract
dc.identifier http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/10161
dc.identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tran.12041
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/172717
dc.description In recent years, anxieties have been expressed that the impacts of southern Africa's AIDS pandemic on young people today will damage their future livelihood prospects. Geographers have been remarkably reluctant to explore young people's future livelihoods, inspired by a concern to view young people as human beings, worthy of study in their own right rather than mere human becomings, of interest only as ‘adults in the making’. Yet there is growing acknowledgement that young people, like older people, are always both ‘being and becoming’. The connections between current and future lives merit much greater attention, both because experiences and actions in childhood and youth undoubtedly shape the futures of individuals and wider society, but also because young people's thoughts and actions are so often geared to the future, and this future orientation shapes their present worlds. This paper reports on research that set out to explore links between the impacts of AIDS and young people's livelihood prospects. Intensive case study research was undertaken, combining participatory methods and life history interviews with young people aged 10–24 in two villages, one in southern Malawi and the other in the mountains of Lesotho. By theorising a temporal dimension to de Haan and Zoomers’ concept of livelihood trajectories, the paper focuses on the ways in which young people respond to both the immediate sustenance requirements of themselves and their households and their need to accrue assets for future livelihoods. Some young people's trajectories appear to be disturbed by the influence of AIDS, but with no systematic patterns. Beyond addressing empirical questions concerning the impacts of AIDS, the paper contributes to our understanding of how livelihoods are produced and to the conceptualisation of youth transitions as produced through the iteration of present and future.
dc.language en
dc.publisher John Wiley & Sons
dc.subject Young people
dc.subject Livelihoods
dc.subject Temporalities
dc.subject AIDS
dc.subject Lesotho
dc.subject Malawi
dc.title Reconceptualising temporality in young lives: exploring young people’s current and future livelihoods in AIDS-affected southern Africa
dc.type Article


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