Hakizimana, Cyriaque2016-10-202016-10-202016Hakizimana, C. (2016) The New Alliance on Food Security and Nutrition: What are the Implications for Africa’s Youth? Future Agricultures Policy Brief 86. Brighton: Future Agricultures Consortiumhttp://hdl.handle.net/10566/2455http://www.plaas.org.za/plaas-publication/fac-pb86Young people are a growing proportion of Africa’s population and most live in poverty in rural areas. Despite urbanisation, in absolute numbers the rural youth are growing and agricultural development needs to prioritise opportunities for them to create land-based livelihoods. Large-scale land-based investments that allocate land and water to private companies are often justified with the promise of job creation, but typically create fewer jobs than the land-based livelihoods that they displace. Private investments in agriculture need to be designed to create opportunities for young people to create livelihoods for themselves and their families, both in primary production and also in upstream and downstream enterprises. Implementation of the New Alliance on Food Security and Nutrition needs to avoid large-scale land-based investments and facilitate the process of developing young people as independent farmers and producers capable of establishing landbased and rural non-farm livelihoods on their own, and on their own terms.enReaders are encouraged to quote or reproduce material from Future Agricultures Briefings in their own publications. In return, the Future Agricultures Consortium requests due acknowledgement and a copy of the publication.AfricaYouthAgricultureFood securityLandgrabsRural livelihoodsThe new alliance on food security and nutrition: what are the implications for Africa’s youth?Technical Report