NEET and resilient: The lived experiences of a sample of South African emerging adults

Int J Psychol. 2024 Dec;59(6):911-919. doi: 10.1002/ijop.13219. Epub 2024 Jul 2.

Abstract

There is scant understanding of what supports African emerging adults who are not in employment, education or training (i.e., NEET) to show resilience to NEET-related challenges. This article narrows that gap by reporting an iterative phenomenological study with nine African emerging adults (mean age: 23.44; 66% female) who were NEET for the 18-month duration of the study and living in a resource-constrained community in South Africa. We interviewed each young person three times (June 2021; December 2021; June 2022). A reflexive thematic analysis of these interview transcripts showed that being NEET is a multifaceted challenge. Supported by a mix of personal, relational and environmental resources, young people managed this challenge by resisting or recuperating from destructive coping mechanisms and believing in a successful future self. These findings point to the importance of young people and their social ecologies (families, peers, service providers and policymakers) recognising and enacting their co-responsibility for resilience to the compound challenges of being NEET.

Keywords: African youth; Multisystemic resilience; Not in employment, Education or training; Qualitative.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Psychological*
  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Resilience, Psychological*
  • South Africa
  • Unemployment / psychology
  • Young Adult

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