Editorial Releases: 2004
SOUTH AFRICANESS - HOW THE NEW GENERATION OF TEENAGERS VIEW SOUTH AFRICA: September 22, 2004
Birth to Twenty, the largest and longest running study of child health and development, has been following over 2000 children, born shortly after Nelson Mandela?s release from prison, for the past 14 years. This year Birth to Twenty embarked on a study to explore young people?s view of national identity, a study funded by the South African Netherlands Research Programme on Alternatives in Development (SANPAD). National identity and future orientation It is a psychological truism, first articulated by the American psychologist, William James that we can alter our experience of our environmental conditions by the way we think about them. Furthermore, international studies highlight the importance of hope (a dimension of future orientation) in avoiding negative emotions, including depression, and in promoting individual well-being and strong national identity. In light of the importance of hope, the lack or loss of hope can be expected to have decidedly negative consequences on how young people plan and enact their future social and economic lives. Furthermore, it has been postulated that national identity can either exacerbate or buffer a sense of hopelessness. Indeed, conditions are challenging for young people in South Africa. In the 1996 Census, 8% of youth were recorded as having no formal education. Only 21% of all young people currently complete secondary school, and a mere 6% go on to higher education. Two out of every five young people are out of work and it is estimated that more than half a million young people were unemployed during the period 1994-1999. HIV/AIDS is a specific threat to young people. Nearly half (45%) of the HIV prevalence in South Africa occurs in the under 24-year-age group. Social conditions associated with race, gender and class cause threats to well-being and tend to be unequally distributed in the population. For example, young women are more likely to drop out of school than young men, largely because of pregnancy. By the age of 19 years, 35% of women have been pregnant or have given birth to a child. Young women are up to 6 times more likely than young men to be infected with HIV. At a population group level, young Africans are significantly less likely to complete school, further their education and get a job than White youth. This means that social position and group membership are likely to have a strong influence on the future expectations of young people as well as national identity. Study results Some of the questions and their responses are detailed: What do you like most about South Africa?
What would be the first thing you would do as the President of South Africa?
Are you proudly South African?
How do you see your future in South Africa?
If you won the Lotto, what would you do with the money?
Take home message In this preliminary study, it is startling how aware and astute these teenagers are concerning the challenges facing South Africa, and despite these challenges, the overwhelming majority are proudly South African and hopeful of their future. However, will their views change as they get older, and how their views will impact their decisions and outcomes along the way to adulthood, these are some of the questions the study hopes to investigate over the coming years as these teenagers become young adults. It is clear that government, teachers and parents need to promote and harness the optimism and hopefulness of youth, and empower them to effect change and realise the ?South African dream?. Back to editorialRelease Back to Top Contact person: Carmen Basson
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