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The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.

In response to a youth unemployment crisis, the South African government has placed a strong emphasis on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship education (EE) as a strategy for job creation. Using the Raymond Ackerman Academy of Entrepreneurial Development (RAA) as a case study, this dissertation see...

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Main Author: Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa
Other Authors: Leibbrandt, Murray
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa
author2 Leibbrandt, Murray
author_browse Leibbrandt, Murray
Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa
author_facet Leibbrandt, Murray
Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa
author_sort Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa
collection Thesis
description In response to a youth unemployment crisis, the South African government has placed a strong emphasis on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship education (EE) as a strategy for job creation. Using the Raymond Ackerman Academy of Entrepreneurial Development (RAA) as a case study, this dissertation seeks to investigate the impact of EE for youth considered vulnerable to unemployment. It specifically examines whether EE has been a mechanism to support black, urban township youth, based on the Cape Flats, to overcome their structural circumstances to put them on a path towards improved livelihoods. Then if so, how. Its key research questions are, What has been the nature of the impact of the RAA Cape Town on graduates’ personal development and economic livelihoods? Then, if the RAA has impacted the personal development and economic livelihoods of participants in the programme, how has it done so? The study, which drew predominantly on qualitative research combined with quantitative surveys and methods, showed that participating in the RAA entrepreneurship programme impacted participants both personally and economically. Participants found a combination of programme factors valuable, including the person-centred approach, the combination of the business and personal development curriculum, the role of staff, and access to networks and opportunities. The RAA seemed to build confidence, developed an entrepreneurial mindset and served as a launch pad towards improved economic livelihoods, albeit not exclusively through starting a business. The study was unable to ascertain whether outcomes were entirely attributed to the EE programme run by the RAA. Analysis of the counterfactual group showed that these youth were able to move forward without participating in the RAA, but not to the degree of participants in the programme. The counterfactual data also gave valuable insight into how for some participants emotional stress and financial responsibility contributed to their withdrawal from the programme, and that without additional support may prevent some young people from getting ahead. The study builds on the EE literature that proposes that design of EE should be holistic, multi-dimensional, and experiential; and should carefully consider a broad spectrum of elements from course content, to staff, to the context and environment in which it is presented. It indicated that EE that teaches “through” entrepreneurship versus “for” entrepreneurship does appear to impact young people’s ability to engage in the economy (mostly through employment) and can increase their earning potential. The study supports the argument that EE can launch youth towards improved economic livelihoods; and can therefore serve as an impactful strategy for alleviating youth unemployment.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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publisher School of Economics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30803 The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates. Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa Leibbrandt, Murray De Lannoy, Ariane In response to a youth unemployment crisis, the South African government has placed a strong emphasis on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship education (EE) as a strategy for job creation. Using the Raymond Ackerman Academy of Entrepreneurial Development (RAA) as a case study, this dissertation seeks to investigate the impact of EE for youth considered vulnerable to unemployment. It specifically examines whether EE has been a mechanism to support black, urban township youth, based on the Cape Flats, to overcome their structural circumstances to put them on a path towards improved livelihoods. Then if so, how. Its key research questions are, What has been the nature of the impact of the RAA Cape Town on graduates’ personal development and economic livelihoods? Then, if the RAA has impacted the personal development and economic livelihoods of participants in the programme, how has it done so? The study, which drew predominantly on qualitative research combined with quantitative surveys and methods, showed that participating in the RAA entrepreneurship programme impacted participants both personally and economically. Participants found a combination of programme factors valuable, including the person-centred approach, the combination of the business and personal development curriculum, the role of staff, and access to networks and opportunities. The RAA seemed to build confidence, developed an entrepreneurial mindset and served as a launch pad towards improved economic livelihoods, albeit not exclusively through starting a business. The study was unable to ascertain whether outcomes were entirely attributed to the EE programme run by the RAA. Analysis of the counterfactual group showed that these youth were able to move forward without participating in the RAA, but not to the degree of participants in the programme. The counterfactual data also gave valuable insight into how for some participants emotional stress and financial responsibility contributed to their withdrawal from the programme, and that without additional support may prevent some young people from getting ahead. The study builds on the EE literature that proposes that design of EE should be holistic, multi-dimensional, and experiential; and should carefully consider a broad spectrum of elements from course content, to staff, to the context and environment in which it is presented. It indicated that EE that teaches “through” entrepreneurship versus “for” entrepreneurship does appear to impact young people’s ability to engage in the economy (mostly through employment) and can increase their earning potential. The study supports the argument that EE can launch youth towards improved economic livelihoods; and can therefore serve as an impactful strategy for alleviating youth unemployment. 2020-01-23T12:59:53Z 2020-01-23T12:59:53Z 2019 2020-01-22T08:24:07Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30803 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Yiannakaris, Elli Cherissa
The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.
title_full The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.
title_fullStr The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.
title_full_unstemmed The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.
title_short The impact of the Raymond Ackerman Academy of entrepreneurial development (RAA) in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates.
title_sort impact of the raymond ackerman academy of entrepreneurial development raa in creating improved and sustainable livelihoods amongst academy graduates
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30803
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