Do You Hear the Youth Sing? (original) (raw)

United Nations Resolutions on Youth and Peacebuilding

HUMANUS DISCOURSE, 2024

The current total population of the world today is 7.837 billion and 1.2 billion from the age of 15-24 years of age are youth. Considering this number, youth are vulnerable to conflict either directly or indirectly. The study has also shown that when it comes to conflict resolution youth are most time marginalized. This paper aims to prove that the inclusion of youth in peacebuilding would reduce conflict and promote peaceful coexistence. Furthermore, the demographic argument in this paper is probably one of the most compelling reasons for recognising the role of youth in peacebuilding and building peace. Therefore, UN Resolution 2250 in December 2015, is significant because it finally puts youth at the centre of progressions of peacebuilding and policies for the sustainable progress of peace and security. This paper is unique because it points out the unprecedented resolution for different reasons. First, it is the first time that the UNSC has adopted a thematic resolution dealing comprehensively with youth in issues related to peace and security. Second, UNSC recognises young people's role in promoting peace, transforming conflicts, and preventing violence. In this resolution, youth are not considered only as a group to be protected, nor as a group to be protected from, but are rather considered as actors for positive change in their communities, recognizing their role as catalysts for peace and actors in preventing violence. The paper recommends that the resolution demands to give voice to young people in peace processes, urging governments, private and public entities, and civil society and institutions-including UN agencies to provide both the tools and the necessary funding to transform the text into real policies and specific projects. Finally, the paper adopts descriptive and content analysis pedagogy.

We Are Here: An Integrated Approach to Youth Inclusive Peace Processes (Altiok & Grizelj, July 2019)

United Nations Office of the Secretary-General's Envoy on Youth, 2019

Young people today often constitute the majority population in countries with ongoing peace processes. This is the first global policy paper to document and analyze where and how young people engage with peace processes, and begins to highlight why youth inclusion matters for the prevention of violence and achieving sustainable peace agreements. Across the world, young people are actively working to build peace and prevent violence. Over 1,000 peace agreements have been signed globally in the last two decades. While broader inclusion has shown to positively impact the sustainability of peace agreements, no comprehensive studies have assessed the role and impact of young people during, and in the lead up to, these peace agreements. Peace negotiations remain central to decision-making in a peace process, yet it is a key phase during which young people continue to be politically marginalized, excluded, and undervalued. The paper assesses youth participation and inclusion in peace processes from young people’s own point of view, through three integrated but non-hierarchical layers: in the room, around the room and outside the room of formal peace negotiations.

Young People's Participation in Peacebuilding: A Practice Note

The primary objective of this Practice Note is to inform policymakers and donors of key strategic and programming considerations for supporting young people’s participation to peacebuilding. Specifically, this note has been developed to: • offer evidence-based, promising practices in youth peacebuilding in the field; • advance the understanding of donors and policy-makers of complex and often interconnected policy and programme considerations for more holistic support to youth peacebuilding interventions, and; • enhance the effectiveness of policies and funding strategies of bilateral and multilateral donors and agencies supporting youth peacebuilding interventions. This Practice Note summarizes the situation of youth in conflict-affected environments, argues the importance of investing in youth and peacebuilding, addresses existing assumptions and theories of change regarding youth and peacebuilding, and overviews key issues and highlights a variety of promising practices in different sectors and thematic areas. The development of this Practice Note was a collaborative effort led by the IANYD Working Group on Youth and Peacebuilding, which includes 40 partner organizations primarily from civil society and the United Nations.

A Brief Analysis of New UN Security Council Resolution 2535 on Youth, Peace and Security

2020

On 14 July, the UN Security Council adopted its third resolution on Youth, Peace and Security (YPS): UNSCR 2535 (2020). The resolution was co-sponsored by France and the Dominican Republic (DR) – the first time a permanent and non-permanent Member of the Security Council collaborated to co-sponsor a YPS resolution. One of the most significant elements of the Resolution is that it cements the place of YPS on the agenda of the Security Council, by requiring the UN Secretary-General to submit a biennial report to the Council on the implementation of the YPS agenda and associated Resolutions.

Does the 'Youth, Peace and Security' agenda provide an important new contribution to peacebuilding or does it 'securitize youth'

Does the 'Youth, Peace and Security' agenda provide an important new contribution to peacebuilding or does it 'securitize youth', 2023

Inspired by these discussions, this essay aims to explore whether the ‘Youth, Peace and Security’ agenda provides an important new contribution to peacebuilding processes or does it ‘securitize youth’. This essay consists of two sections. It first reviews the conversation around UN reconciliation in relation to new inclusive reforms within structures and role of youth within those proposed structures for building sustainable peace.

Legal Frameworks and Challenges for Youth Engagement in Peace building: A Global Perspective

JOURNAL OF MULTI-DISCIPLINARY STUDIES, 2024

Youth engagement in peacebuilding is essential for fostering sustainable peace and development. This paper examines the legal frameworks and challenges surrounding youth participation in peacebuilding efforts. At the international level, legal instruments such as the United Nations Security Council Resolution 2250 recognize the importance of youth in peacebuilding and call for their inclusion in decision-making processes. However, despite these efforts, youth face numerous challenges in engaging in peacebuilding activities, including legal barriers, lack of access to resources, and marginalization. Based on the case studies analyzed from diverse regions. This paper demonstrates the impact of legal frameworks on youth participation in peacebuilding. It highlights ways in which these frameworks can either facilitate or hinder such engagement, offering recommendations for enhancing legal structures to better support youth involvement in peacebuilding efforts, By addressing these challenges and enhancing legal frameworks, policymakers and stakeholders can empower youth to play a more active role in building peaceful and inclusive societies.

Securitizing Youth - Conclusions: Young People's Roles in the Global Youth Peace and Security Agenda

Securitizing Youth: Young People's Roles in the Global Youth Peace and Security Agenda, 2021

In the concluding chapter, I synthesize and elaborate upon the overall lessons offered by the volume. As the individual contributions reveal, young women and men across the world are actively seeking opportunities to participate socially, politically and economically – advocating for the needs of their communities in Kenya; engaging in environmental peacebuilding in South Sudan and Uganda; becoming educated against violence and conflict in Afghanistan; struggling to reach social adulthood in Rwanda; or using media to fight violent extremism across the globe. Some of these experiences have been successful; others have met with as yet unresolved challenges. By contributing to a better understanding of the changing nature of violent conflict and identifying potential strategies to reverse the negative manifestations of youth exclusion, this volume takes an important step forward in our path towards sustaining peace.