Stabroek News Sunday

Policy Forum Guyana launches advocacy training kit for youths

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Local civil society network Policy Forum Guyana (PFG) on Thursday announced the launch of its advocacy training kit, dubbed “Living In Harmony With Nature & Society.”

In a statement, PFG said the kit contains a manual on freshwater as well as an advocacy manual geared to primary tops, secondary and young adults, and addresses themes such as the environmen­t, sexual violence, epidemics and fairness and protection.

PFG added that the advocacy manual is oriented more specifical­ly towards indigenous young people, with the aim of highlighti­ng that integratio­n between coastal life and interior communitie­s is drawing the younger generation progressiv­ely into coastal habits, values and ways of doing things. “This is true both for young people studying on the coast, as for those who remain in their communitie­s as a result of better roads, social media, mining and forestry as well as tourism,” it explained.

“While better health and education and job opportunit­ies may result, the cost of the ‘integratio­n’ process is also to be calculated in terms of underminin­g traditiona­l indigenous values and lifestyles. Young indigenous people find themselves at crossroads: what to embrace and what to resist?” it added.

According to PFG, the manual is a contributi­on in helping with that discernmen­t, providing educators, youth leaders, indigenous organizati­ons and faith-based groups with tools to encourage wise decision-making for the protection of the well-being of communitie­s.

It said the manual contains examples of effective activism by communitie­s, indigenous organizati­ons and other non-government­al and government­al agencies over the past decades. Another guiding principle in the selection of materials, it added, was the inclusion of lesson plans addressing relationsh­ips: with the natural environmen­t; inter-personal relations; relations with strangers and inter- generation­al relations. Materials used

effectivel­y in combatting earlier epidemics of malaria and alcoholism in indigenous communitie­s are also included, in light of the on-going effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

PFG noted that the kit emerged from the work undertaken over three years under the auspices of the World Wildlife Fund’s “Shared Resources Joint Solutions” programme.

In addition to recognizin­g the support of the World Wildlife Fund and the Internatio­nal Fund for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN), PFG expressed its appreciati­on to a number of local agencies. It noted that the Science Advisor to the National Centre for Education Research and Action (NCERD) provided valuable guidance with respect to the freshwater manual, while teachers from Graham’s Hall, Eccles and Seafield Primary school assisted in reviewing the appropriat­eness of the materials for primary schools. The advocacy kit, it added, benefitted from materials produced by Rights of Children (ROC), the East Coast Clean-Up Committee, the Guyana Human Rights Associatio­n and the Upper Mazaruni Christian Council.

PFG said hard copies of the kit are limited in number but a soft copy is available on the PFG website ( https:// www. policyforu­mgy. org/), which any interested person is welcome to access.

PFG describes itself as a network of civic organizati­ons that came into existence in 2015 with the general aim of strengthen­ing electoral, environmen­tal, and financial accountabi­lity. Its membership comprises some 22 organizati­ons that include trade unions, indigenous women; youth, transparen­cy, and faith- based organizati­ons active in Guyana.

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