Open Access
American Research Journal of History and Culture
ISSN (Online): 2379-2914
DOI: 10.46568/arjhc
Boda-boda, Youth Employment and Globalisation in Uganda
Abstract
Formerly shunned due its notoriety for facilitating illicit trade and transporting criminals across Uganda’s international borders, the boda-boda transport
industry gained fame in recent years and has become the second largest employer of youths all over Uganda, after agriculture. Recent scholarship on the boda
boda industry has however, concentrated on the risks embedded in it including high infection rates of HIV among the drivers and the daily accidents reported.
Little attention has been paid to the contribution of the industry in youth employment. This paper discusses the role of boda-boda transport industry in solving
the problem of unemployment among the youths in Uganda. The author interviewed seventeen boda-boda drivers in Uganda and thirty-four of their family
members to establish how this transport business has impacted on employment opportunities, financial independence and globalisation of youths. The study
revealed that whereas many youths have dropped out of school to take up the boda-boda business, profits of this trade have facilitated the education of some
young people in Uganda and enabled them to globally connect with youths across the globe. The study recommends sensitisation, business skills training as well
as adult and distant education opportunities for the youthful motorcycle drivers.