Youth participation
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In 1975, the National Commission on Resources for Youth in the United States defined youth participation as:
...Youth participation is the involving of youth in responsible, challenging action that meets genuine needs, with opportunities for planning and/or decision-making affecting others in an activity whose impact or consequence is extended to others— i.e., outside or beyond the youth participants themselves. Other desirable features of youth participation are provision for critical reflection on the participatory activity and the opportunity for group effort toward a common goal.
In 1995, the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) established a definition of meaningful youth participation as:
Meaningful youth participation involves recognizing and nurturing the strengths, interests, and abilities of young people through the provision of real opportunities for youth to become involved in decisions that affect them at individual and systemic levels.
In these forms, activities may include:
- youth councils
- participatory action research
- collegiate forum
- youth as members of boards of directors
- participatory action research
- youth-led media
[edit] Examples
- Collegiate Forum, the first international student policy center
- The Podium: A Collegiate Journal, where tomorrow's leaders speak today
- The Wellspring, a web log about youth affairs opportunities in Australia and at the United Nations (UN).
[edit] See also
- youth voice
- youth empowerment
- community youth development
- youth movements
- Convention on the Rights of the Child, particularly Article 12