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Reimagining Food Systems in Sierra Leone through Youth-Led Agroecology and Ecosystem Restoration
Project Story
The Reimagining Sustainability Institute (RSI) believes that food systems are more than mechanisms for producing food—they are interconnected systems that shape livelihoods, culture, ecosystems, health, and community resilience. We believe that restoring ecosystems and transforming food systems must happen together if people and nature are to thrive.
Money raised through this project will directly support youth-led agroecology and ecosystem restoration initiatives across Sierra Leone. Through hands-on learning, community engagement, and practical demonstration sites, young people will be empowered to regenerate degraded landscapes, strengthen local food production, and co-create climate-resilient food systems. By combining ecological restoration with sustainable agriculture, the project seeks to cultivate a new generation of environmental stewards while improving food security, biodiversity, and livelihoods.
Our Mission
The Reimagining Sustainability Institute exists to reimagine sustainability and drive transformative change where people thrive and nature regenerates.
We believe that many sustainability challenges stem from fragmented approaches that separate people from nature, agriculture from ecology, and knowledge from practice. Through this initiative, we aim to reconnect these relationships by empowering young people and communities to become active agents in building regenerative food systems.
Our goal is to demonstrate that food production can simultaneously restore ecosystems, strengthen communities, and improve economic opportunities. Through agroecological practices, ecosystem restoration, community learning, and youth leadership, we seek to create practical pathways toward a more just and sustainable future.
Background & Problem Statement
Sierra Leone possesses abundant agricultural potential, fertile soils, and a young population eager to contribute to national development. Yet the country continues to face significant food security challenges, environmental degradation, and youth unemployment.
Agricultural productivity remains constrained by unsustainable farming practices, soil degradation, deforestation, limited access to knowledge and resources, climate variability, and inadequate support systems for young farmers. The expansion of conventional agricultural practices has often contributed to declining soil fertility, biodiversity loss, watershed degradation, and increased vulnerability to climate shocks.
At the same time, many young people perceive agriculture as unattractive due to low productivity, limited profitability, and a lack of innovation opportunities. Consequently, youth unemployment remains high while rural communities face increasing challenges in producing nutritious food sustainably.
Climate change further exacerbates these issues through changing rainfall patterns, extreme weather events, and increasing pressures on ecosystems that support food production. Without intervention, these trends threaten both ecological integrity and long-term food security.
Solution
Reimagining Food Systems in Sierra Leone through Youth-Led Agroecology and Ecosystem Restoration addresses these interconnected challenges by placing young people at the center of food system transformation.
The project will establish demonstration sites and community learning platforms where youth can learn and apply agroecological practices that enhance productivity while restoring ecosystems. These approaches include:
Participants will gain practical skills, mentorship, and leadership experience while implementing restoration activities that improve biodiversity, soil health, climate resilience, and food production.
By integrating ecosystem restoration into food production systems, the project creates a model that simultaneously addresses environmental, social, and economic challenges.
Opportunity
The growing global recognition of agroecology, nature-based solutions, and ecosystem restoration presents a significant opportunity for Sierra Leone.
Young people represent one of the country's greatest assets. By equipping them with knowledge, networks, and practical experience, this project can catalyze a new generation of sustainability leaders and entrepreneurs.
The initiative will create opportunities for:
The project also contributes directly to global priorities including the Sustainable Development Goals, the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, climate adaptation agendas, and efforts to build sustainable food systems.
How We Regenerate
Our approach combines ecosystem restoration, agroecology, education, and community participation.
Key activities include:
Youth Agroecology Learning Hubs
Establishing practical demonstration and learning sites where participants gain hands-on experience in regenerative farming and restoration practices.
Ecosystem Restoration
Supporting reforestation, agroforestry, soil regeneration, and habitat restoration using locally appropriate species and community-led approaches.
Knowledge Exchange
Facilitating learning exchanges between farmers, youth groups, researchers, traditional knowledge holders, and practitioners.
Community Engagement
Working alongside local communities to co-design solutions that reflect local priorities, knowledge systems, and ecological realities.
Leadership Development
Building youth capacity in systems thinking, environmental stewardship, project management, and sustainability leadership.
Together, these activities strengthen ecological health while creating opportunities for learning, livelihoods, and community resilience.
Tracking Impact
The project will employ both quantitative and qualitative approaches to monitor ecological, social, and economic outcomes.
Environmental indicators may include:
Social indicators may include:
Economic indicators may include:
Regular monitoring, reflection sessions, surveys, and community feedback processes will inform adaptive management and continuous improvement throughout implementation.
Our Experience
The Reimagining Sustainability Institute (RSI) is a youth-led organisation committed to advancing transformative sustainability solutions through research, innovation, education, and community action.
RSI acts as a catalyst, convener, and companion to young people, communities, and organisations seeking to address complex social and environmental challenges. Our work spans ecosystem restoration, sustainability education, youth innovation, climate resilience, and participatory approaches to change.
Through initiatives such as the Reimagination Hub, Green Schoolyards for Urban Ecosystem Restoration, and Community-Led Ecosystem Restoration, RSI is building practical models that empower communities to co-create sustainable futures.
Our team brings experience in environmental research, community engagement, programme management, stakeholder partnerships, sustainability education, and youth development. We are committed to integrating scientific knowledge with local knowledge systems to ensure that restoration and food system transformation are both ecologically effective and socially just.
By combining youth leadership, agroecological practice, and ecosystem restoration, RSI seeks to contribute to a future where Sierra Leone's food systems are regenerative, resilient, and capable of supporting both people and nature for generations to come.
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