Abstract
Exposure to drought is on the increase, also in sub-Saharan Africa. Even so, little attention has been paid to what supports youth resilience to the stressors associated with drought. In response, this article reports a secondary analysis of qualitative data generated in a phenomenological study with 25 South African adolescents (average age 15.6; majority Sepedi-speaking) from a drought-impacted and structurally disadvantaged community. The thematic findings show the importance of personal, relational, and structural resources that fit with youths’ sociocultural context. Essentially, proactive collaboration between adolescents and their social ecologies is necessary to co-advance socially just responses to the challenges associated with drought.
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Theron, L., Mampane, M. R., Ebersöhn, L., & Hart, A. (2020). Youth resilience to drought: Learning from a group of south african adolescents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(21), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217896
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