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What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme

The incidence of unemployment falls most harshly on youth, who are generally low skilled and often have no experience of formal sector employment; with just 24.4 percent of young people being active in the labour market. In an attempt to assist this disenfranchised so called 'lost generation’ there...

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Main Author: Setlhodi, Mapaseka
Other Authors: Mlatsheni, C
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Setlhodi, Mapaseka
author2 Mlatsheni, C
author_browse Mlatsheni, C
Setlhodi, Mapaseka
author_facet Mlatsheni, C
Setlhodi, Mapaseka
author_sort Setlhodi, Mapaseka
collection Thesis
description The incidence of unemployment falls most harshly on youth, who are generally low skilled and often have no experience of formal sector employment; with just 24.4 percent of young people being active in the labour market. In an attempt to assist this disenfranchised so called 'lost generation’ there has been a major shift from passive to active labour market programmes in many countries across the world in support of the unemployed, where these programmes often concentrate on the youth. But the results on these active labour market interventions are very mixed, in terms of their effectiveness, with some countries having experienced significant improvements in unemployment levels; and others are yet to bring to fruition the economic benefits the programmes had hoped to achieve. Through the use of a qualitative research method approach, by means of surveys, this paper aims to lend to the lessons around youth labour market interventions by conducting a case study on a particular NGO’s youth intervention program to see if it has had any impact on reducing youth unemployment. What sets the programme apart is that it offered meaningful volunteering as a form of work experience as well as a self-development component which allows the youth to be more self-aware. The study found that overall the time youth spend in unemployment after completing the programme decreased by 6 months and that other unemployment duration determining factors play a key role in determining how long a youth spends in unemployment. The study found that the attitudes of the participants changed to a more positive outlook on their future prospects once they have completed the program; which lends itself to have a positive impact on job search activity.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:35.974Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher School of Economics
publisherStr School of Economics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30189 What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme Setlhodi, Mapaseka Mlatsheni, C The incidence of unemployment falls most harshly on youth, who are generally low skilled and often have no experience of formal sector employment; with just 24.4 percent of young people being active in the labour market. In an attempt to assist this disenfranchised so called 'lost generation’ there has been a major shift from passive to active labour market programmes in many countries across the world in support of the unemployed, where these programmes often concentrate on the youth. But the results on these active labour market interventions are very mixed, in terms of their effectiveness, with some countries having experienced significant improvements in unemployment levels; and others are yet to bring to fruition the economic benefits the programmes had hoped to achieve. Through the use of a qualitative research method approach, by means of surveys, this paper aims to lend to the lessons around youth labour market interventions by conducting a case study on a particular NGO’s youth intervention program to see if it has had any impact on reducing youth unemployment. What sets the programme apart is that it offered meaningful volunteering as a form of work experience as well as a self-development component which allows the youth to be more self-aware. The study found that overall the time youth spend in unemployment after completing the programme decreased by 6 months and that other unemployment duration determining factors play a key role in determining how long a youth spends in unemployment. The study found that the attitudes of the participants changed to a more positive outlook on their future prospects once they have completed the program; which lends itself to have a positive impact on job search activity. 2019-06-04T07:15:43Z 2019-06-04T07:15:43Z 2019 2019-06-04T07:15:20Z Master Thesis Masters Master of Commerce http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30189 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Setlhodi, Mapaseka
What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme
thesis_degree_str Master's
title What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme
title_full What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme
title_fullStr What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme
title_full_unstemmed What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme
title_short What factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth: a case study of the action volunteers Africa’s youth labour market programme
title_sort what factors contribute to the unemployment duration of youth a case study of the action volunteers africa s youth labour market programme
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30189
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