Social Solidarity Economy and Village-centric Development in North-West Cameroon

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Social Solidarity Economy and Village-centric Development in North-West Cameroon
Abstract
Amidst shrinking budgets for community development in most of sub-Saharan Africa, the social solidarity economy is touted as a model in local development. This article situates solidarity initiatives and capability-focused outcomes that deliver enhanced livelihoods, social security and community development. The conceptual framing of social theory, social capital and social economy informs this case study with focus on the Ndong Awing Cultural and Development Association, North-West region, Cameroon. The analysis of semi-structured interviews and secondary sources suggests that solidarity networks such as njangis, cooperatives, quarter development unions and diaspora networks promote village-centric development. These overlapping networks generate scarce financial and human resources–essential packages for livelihoods and welfare. Emerging state policy is yet to calibrate these mechanisms of ground-up, mutual development drives. Galvanising these solidarity assets require meaningful co-productionand revamped state−community relations. This article offers a paradigm shift in how village groups mobilise income, capital and financing of village projects, nurtured through human development and agency.
Publication
The International Journal of Community and Social Development
Volume
3
Issue
2
Pages
126-144
Date
06/2021
Journal Abbr
The International Journal of Community and Social Development
Language
en
ISSN
2516-6026, 2516-6034
Accessed
12/02/2024, 10:33
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Call Number
openalex:W3168107988
Extra
openalex: W3168107988
Citation
Che, C. F., & Mbah, M. (2021). Social Solidarity Economy and Village-centric Development in North-West Cameroon. The International Journal of Community and Social Development, 3(2), 126–144. https://doi.org/10.1177/25166026211015474