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    19 local organizations to watch: Harambee Youth Employment Accelerator

    This South African organization has been studied by the Harvard Kennedy School for its work on boosting youth employment.

    By Devex Editor // 13 November 2024
    šŸ“‹ What they do Harambee Youth Employment Accelerator dismantles barriers that keep millions of young South Africans unemployed. Its partners include the government, private sector, civil society, and a network of over 3.9 million youth. šŸ‘€ Why we’re watching Harambee has introduced technologies to boost employment rates. It is an anchor partner in the SA Youth network (sayouth.mobi), a multichannel platform that provides youth with access to jobs and skilling opportunities. The platform also enables the private and public sectors to access young job seekers. It’s all free to use and data-free, so the high cost of data is bypassed while geomapping addresses transport cost barriers by matching young people to opportunities close to where they live. Last year, the Harvard Kennedy School conducted a case study on Harambee’s model, using it as a tool for its graduate students to gain insights into building successful not-for-profit social enterprises. šŸ¢ Countries of operation South Africa, with an office in Rwanda. šŸ—“ļø Founding year 2011. āž• Leadership Kasthuri Soni, CEO. šŸ“Š Impact snapshot • Harambee Youth Employment Accelerator has supported 3.9 million young job seekers. • In 2023, it enabled 1 million earning opportunities for unemployed youth. Since then, Harambee Youth Employment Accelerator has connected another 400,000 young people to earning opportunities. • Earning opportunities have generated $1.4 billion in income. • It has a network of 2,524 employer partners. šŸ’”Insider scoop Harambee started as small cohorts of 80 to 100 young people receiving job support. A few years after opening its office in Johannesburg, it had a national footprint and was supporting over 100,000 young people annually. A range of structural challenges, however, keep young people locked out of South Africa’s economy. Harambee thus partnered with the government to place over 1 million young people in short-term roles as school assistants and general assistants across more than 23,000 schools nationwide. This initiative represents the largest youth employment program in South Africa’s history, according to Harambee. āž”ļø Follow 🌐harambee.co.za

    Harambee Youth Employment AcceleratorĀ dismantles barriers that keep millions of young South Africans unemployed. Its partners include the government, private sector, civil society, and a network of over 3.9 million youth. Ā 

    Harambee has introduced technologies to boost employment rates. It is an anchor partner in the SA Youth network (sayouth.mobi), a multichannel platform that provides youth with access to jobs and skilling opportunities. The platform also enables the private and public sectors to access young job seekers. It’s all free to use and data-free, so the high cost of data is bypassed while geomappingĀ addresses transport cost barriers by matching young people to opportunities close to where they live.

    Last year, the Harvard Kennedy SchoolĀ conducted a case study on Harambee’s model, using it as a tool for its graduate students to gain insights into building successful not-for-profit social enterprises.

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