Youth farming a Resilient Future with & in vulnerable communities

Part 2 of a series written by youth partners of UNDP’s annual Ready Set Great Youth in Development showcase

January 12, 2023
Jenine Shepherd writes Youth farming a Resilient Future with & in vulnerable communities

Jénine Shepherd, Founder of Youths For Excellence Ltd.

Photo Contributed. Artwork by UNDP MCO in Jamaica
By Jénine Shepherd, Founder of Youths For Excellence Ltd

Watch Video at end of article

 


Today’s young people will become leaders of a world still challenged by hunger and poverty. Experts say the world will not achieve Sustainable Development Goal 2 – Zero Hunger – by 2030, which will affect 660 million in the next eight years, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization’s Annual Report, 2021. In the year COVID-19 struck, hunger rose to an estimated 768 million people globally. Sixty million were from Latin America and the Caribbean, despite the region only accounting for 8.38% of the world’s population.

The latest Human Development Report of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) perfectly analyses the crisis confounding our globe: “Layers of uncertainty are stacking up and interacting to unsettle life in unprecedented ways, with devastating impact for billions of people around the world.” The HDR further states that with back-to-back crises like COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine combined with social and economic shifts, dangerous planetary changes, and more – the Human Development Index declined globally for two years in a row.  

Declining food security compounded by Climate Change is high on the radar globally and regionally and must also become a priority for current youth leadership in Jamaica. CARICOM recently announced the “25 in 5” agenda to reduce the region’s food import bill by 25% in the next five years. This is welcome, considering that the food import bill for Jamaica with 2.9 million residents was USD 900 million pre pandemic and USD 700 million for Barbados despite a population size that is one tenth the size of Jamaica’s. If we are to thrive as small island developing nations, greater priority must be given to the agricultural sector as a sustainable means of development, to lessen our dependence on highly volatile industries such as tourism which accounted for 24.5% of the Caribbean’s GDP in 2020 (Economic Impact Reports, WTTC, 2021). Tourism should not be the crutch on which Caribbean societies lean. We must diversify, focusing more on agricultural development to address food security while boosting economic growth and Jamaica’s competitive advantage as a logistical hub.

Youth are willing to play a part in bolstering agricultural development to build a food resilient future. Having worked with over 12,000 children and their families through Youths For Excellence, which is mandated to focus on education inequities, our NGO recommends a model that integrates Sustainable Development Goal 4: Quality Education, at its core.  We recognize the intersectionality between SDG 4: Quality Education and other SDGs like Decent Work and Economic Growth (SDG 8), No Poverty (SDG 1), Zero Hunger (SDG 2), Climate Action (SDG 13), Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions (SDG 16) and Sustainable Cities and Communities (SDG 11).

There is currently limited support for young people who are trying to start social enterprises. Funding is simply nonexistent. A centralized grant system in Jamaica and the Caribbean, similar to what exists in the United      States would be helpful so that young people who have great ideas for social entrepreneurship can be supported in the best way possible. Young people find it hard to come up with the money for registration and maintenance of company status. The fees are crippling to the people who are genuinely doing the volunteer work. That means we need to assess as a country how these bureaucratic processes are hindering us versus helping us to uplift the vulnerable.

Urban Agricultural education can be a powerful tool for learning productivity boosting techniques like aquaponics that improve the economic outcomes of communities; boosting climate resiliency by greatly reducing emissions; and reducing crime and violence, while providing legitimate streams of income and productive use of time. We must also champion regional adoption of early childhood agricultural education and eventually, worldwide adoption, to set a firm foundation for next generation action.  

We are working on launching the Farm the Future (FTF) initiative in partnership with the Rural Agricultural Development Authority, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the Rose Town Foundation and the Members of Parliament for two pilot communities, Minister Delroy Chuck for Grants Pen and Mark Golding for Rose Town respectively. We recommend a mixture of technical capacity-building training bolstered by job placements and agri-business development. We will tackle the recurring challenge of limited job placement opportunities in the post training period by providing startup venture capital and job placements on FTF farms.

Urban, climate smart farming populated by persons with limited opportunities is mushrooming as a resilience building intervention. The European Union’s education for entrepreneurship in agriculture) programme called AGRIENT, like the ‘Farm The Future Initiative’, is working to train people in agricultural techniques and help them establish agribusinesses via Virtual Reality technologies. This is very similar to initiatives already undertaken in Iran and Uganda with very similar economic landscapes. We can and should go further by championing a cultural shift to a high-tech agricultural society.

Agricultural development is a key component in mitigating the impact of the pandemic while building more resilient communities. Urban farming is not just about food security; it provides jobs, education, entrepreneurship, socioeconomic advancement for underserved communities and business deals with large industry players. Our recommendations have been well received by the Ministries of Agriculture in the seven other Caribbean countries that YFE serves, so we plan to expand the FTF programme to these countries once the pilots have been successfully concluded in Jamaica. Our programme makes a solid contribution to the competitiveness of the agriculture sector in both domestic and international markets.

There is currently limited support for young people who are trying to start social enterprises. Funding is simply nonexistent. A centralized grant system in Jamaica and the Caribbean, similar to what exists in the United States would be helpful, so that young people who have great ideas for social entrepreneurship can be supported in the best way possible. Young people find it hard to come up with the money for registration and maintenance of company status. The fees are crippling to the people who are genuinely doing the volunteer work. That means we need to assess as a country how these bureaucratic processes are hindering us versus helping us to uplift the vulnerable.

Partner governments should support youth organizations like YFE financially and institutionally to ensure successful adoption of these programmes, and that we are financially viable. I also join my colleague delegates from UNDP’s Ready Set Great Youth in Development showcase in 2021, in calling for business creation hubs for young entrepreneurs and incentives for business startups that includes information on the ‘how-to for business creation’.

With public-private sector support, we can improve the lives of millions and build a more resilient, food-secure future led by resilient people no longer left behind.


Jénine Shepherd is Founder of Youths For Excellence Ltd.  You can contact her on @shepherdjenine on Instagram and Facebook or @jenineashepherd on Twitter and by emailing  jshepherd@youthsforexcellence.org . This article is part of a series written by youth partners of UNDP’s annual Ready Set Great Youth in Development showcase. Visit www.readysetgreatja.com for more information.

 

 

There is currently limited support for young people who are trying to start social enterprises. Funding is simply nonexistent. A centralized grant system in Jamaica and the Caribbean, similar to what exists in the United States would be helpful, so that young people who have great ideas for social entrepreneurship can be supported in the best way possible. Young people find it hard to come up with the money for registration and maintenance of company status. The fees are crippling to the people who are genuinely doing the volunteer work. That means we need to assess as a country how these bureaucratic processes are hindering us versus helping us to uplift the vulnerable.
Jénine Shepherd, Founder Youths For Excellence Ltd.