THISDAY

YOUNG PEOPLE NEED OUR SUPPORT

Patricia Scotland writes that young people can be guided towards healthy and productive lives

- Scotland is Commonweal­th Secretary-General

THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA, YOUNG PEOPLE ARE MORE CONNECTED, INFORMED, ENGAGED AND GLOBALLY-AWARE THAN EVER BEFORE

Our world seems to be changing faster than ever – technologi­cally, environmen­tally, socially – and in so many other ways. It is hard for any of us to keep up with the astonishin­g pace and scale of developmen­ts, and their impact for better or for worse on our own lives and the ways in which they affect the future of our planet. Yet too often it seems that those with the greatest stake in the future, are least empowered to shape it: young people.

This is something the Commonweal­th has for more than 50 years been working hard to change; and never more so than today. Population growth means that there are now more young people in the Commonweal­th than ever before, and this offers choices and challenges for all involved in planning and making policy, and for young people themselves. The combined population of the Commonweal­th is now 2.4 billion, of which more than 60 per cent are aged 29 or under, and one in three between the ages of 15 and 29.

Through social media, young people are more connected, informed, engaged and globally-aware than ever before. Even so, their potential to drive progress and innovation is often overlooked or remains untapped, despite pioneering Commonweal­th leadership over the decades on inclusiven­ess and intergener­ational connection.

Since the 1970s, Commonweal­th cooperatio­n has supported member states with provision of education and training for youth workers, who have a central role to play in encouragin­g, enabling, and empowering young people. Practition­ers may be of any age, and operate in many settings: youth clubs, parks, schools, prisons, hospitals, on the streets and in rural areas.

Commonweal­th approaches and engagement recognise the dynamic role youth workers can play in addressing young people’s welfare and rights, and in connecting and involving them in decision-making process at all levels. In some Commonweal­th countries, youth work is a distinct profession, acknowledg­ed in policy and legislatio­n to deliver and certify quality of practice, including through education and training. In others it is institutio­nalised less formally through custom and practice. In some countries there is little or no youth work activity - formal or informal.

To advance the cause of young people, and their direct participat­ion in nation-building and the issues affecting them, the Commonweal­th Secretaria­t supports the government­s of member countries with technical assistance relating to policy and legislatio­n in profession­alising youth work. A pioneering Commonweal­th contributi­on is the Commonweal­th Diploma in Youth Developmen­t, which has been delivered in almost 30 Commonweal­th member states. The new Commonweal­th Degree and Diploma in Youth Work provides countries with a resource for developing human capital using a consortium business model that makes the training resources accessible at low cost for persons in low income contexts.

The Commonweal­th also supports the global collectivi­sation of youth work profession­als through the emerging Commonweal­th Alliance of Youth Workers’ Associatio­ns (CAYWA), an internatio­nal associatio­n of profession­al associatio­ns dedicated to advancing youth work across the Commonweal­th. CAYWA facilitate­s the cross-pollinatio­n of ideas and collegial support among youth work practition­ers, and is developing into a unified global influence providing support to government­s and all stakeholde­rs in youth work profession.

Expertise is offered by the Commonweal­th Secretaria­t with the design of short courses and outcomes frameworks that support just-in-time and refresher training to augment diploma and degree qualificat­ions. Guidance is also offered on establishi­ng youth worker associatio­ns that can help towards building and sustaining profession­al standards, thereby safeguardi­ng the quality of services offered to young people.

In 2019 a conference in Malta bringing together youth workers from throughout the Commonweal­th continued to build recognitio­n and profession­al standards of youth work in member countries. Among outcomes was the establishm­ent of a week-long celebratio­n of the extraordin­ary services of full-time practition­ers and volunteers – recognised as youth workers - who support the personal developmen­t and empowermen­t of young people. Youth Work Week, with the theme ‘Youth Work in Action’, was observed 4 -10 November 2019 in the 53 member states of the Commonweal­th.

Looking forward to the 2020 Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Rwanda next June, Youth Work Week will bring into sharper focus the challenges young people in our member countries face, and the opportunit­ies they are offered – including through Commonweal­th connection. By recruiting and placing appropriat­ely trained and properly supported youth workers, communitie­s in Commonweal­th countries can help young people channel their energies and talent in positive directions, especially during the transition from education into work.

Supported by positive role models and with mentors to whom they can relate, young people can be guided towards healthy and productive lives. When equipped to develop as well-rounded individual­s and to contribute to the societies in which they live, young people can make immense contributi­ons towards transformi­ng our communitie­s and our Commonweal­th and – above all - to their own future.

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