Youth in rural areas
It is quite tenable that young women and men
in rural areas face particular constraints with regard to both accessibility
and availability of services and facilities, and this result in fewer
opportunities and less information and employment than in urban areas. This is
indeed a pressing issue that needs to be dealt with through a multifaceted
approach. In this writing I discuss the two concepts of volunteerism and community
leaders as in my notion I think they are some of the major anti-progressive
concepts if not facilitated well towards the development of youth in rural
areas.
Volunteerism can be defined as when someone
offers to do a job willingly without expecting to get paid for it. It is well
reflected in the National Youth Policy of 2009-2014 that in
some cases, these youth, particularly if they are unskilled, end up being
destitute and those who are educated and skilled leave their areas/ communities
under-resourced in search of lucrative offers. I would like to believe that
volunteerism is one of the best ways to acquire knowledge and skills that may
somehow provide better opportunities in the mainstream economy because it
imparts one with work experience. Although some voluntary work does not offer financial
incentives, which can be difficult to pursue, what remains important is the acquisition
of skills and workplace experience. With that been said, the youth in rural
areas be it educated or uneducated, still fail to organize themselves by
formulating a cohort of change makers that aims to ameliorate the living
standard of their disadvantaged communities mostly because they are not paid
for what they do or simply because of their pessimistic mindset that triggers
loosing of hope and results to barren future prospects. A strong opinion that I
am inculcating is that the youth in rural areas should organize themselves to form
voluntary projects that will help to uplift their skills base and may generate
income to provide incentives to those who participate, by lobbying funds and other resources, other than sitting down waiting for government to
rescue them from their misery of emptiness and need because truthfully we all
know that government can only do better by providing basic services which
cannot fully suffice for the betterment
of the living standard of youth in rural
areas.
A community leader in its general sense refers
to someone responsible to facilitate development in the community prior to the
mandate given by the community over a consensus firmness of purpose and should have the following qualities but not limited to
leadership and organization skills, ability to communicate, educate and train,
action-orientation, understanding of maneuver and flexibility and ability to
set aside personal judgment. I must emphasize that some reasons why less information
is disseminated within rural areas is because of the
incapacity that is evinced by leaders. Community leaders are incompetent to
take pride in distribution of information amongst the youth in rural areas some
is due to failure to develop various distribution channels were as many people
can be reached and others is just unnecessary greed. Leaders should be held
accountable by local government for not doing their duties by demanding reports
on all tasks allotted to them. In this way leaders will then see the importance
of sharing information with others as way of collectively cultivating equal
opportunity for everyone who stand to benefit other than canalizing them to a
small elite group because this exacerbates impoverishment and underdevelopment.
In
conclusion I acknowledge my first key concept of volunteerism as one of the
benevolent ways to intensify skills development and enhance capacity building
for youth in under-resourced if not underdeveloped rural areas. Responsibilities
and accountability depicted by community leaders in a way of stake holder
engagement and liaison in lobbying resources will serve as a springboard that
bolsters the self-esteem of the youth in rural areas which will result to youth
who adjoin to a shared responsibility in making informed decisions and this
will encourage young people both educated and uneducated to take pride in their
communities by refraining from going out to urban areas seeking for
opportunities that can be cultivated in their respective rural communities.