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BEYOND ELECTIONS: Youth Involvement in Municipal Governance

BEYOND ELECTIONS: Youth Involvement in Municipal Governance. Presentation to the Union of BC Municipalities Conference Vancouver, British Columbia September 25 th , 2003. Presentation Overview. The Family Wellness Project - Geoff Nelson Better Beginnings, Better Futures - Mark Pancer

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BEYOND ELECTIONS: Youth Involvement in Municipal Governance

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  1. BEYOND ELECTIONS: Youth Involvement in Municipal Governance Presentation to the Union of BC Municipalities Conference Vancouver, British Columbia September 25th, 2003

  2. Presentation Overview • The Family Wellness Project - Geoff Nelson • Better Beginnings, Better Futures - Mark Pancer • Youth-Driven Community Involvement - Doug Ragan and Nadim Kara • Commentary - Laura Nelson

  3. Key Areas and Questions inFamily Wellness Project Objective: Promote family wellness and prevent child maltreatment Populations of Study Canadian Society in General Aboriginal Communities in Particular

  4. Our Framework • Vision and values • Ecological view • Prevention continuum • Partnership

  5. Are Communities Friendly to Children and Youth? • According to a recent survey of over 1 million young people by the Search Institute in Minneapolis • only 45% of youth could name an adult other than family members who have influenced them positively • less than 30% considered schools as a caring environment • only 25% said they live in a community that values youth

  6. Are Communities Friendly to Children and Youth? • According to a study released last week, the number of children and youth who were victims of child maltreatment and seen in child protection services in Ontario nearly doubled over a 5 year period (from 12,300 in 1993 to 24, 400 in 1998) • According to a survey of nearly 10,000 adults in Ontario in 1990, 33% of men and 27% of women reported being physically or sexually abused when they were children

  7. Envision a Child and Youth Friendly Community What Does It Look Like?

  8. Ecological Structure of Wellness Child Parental & Family Community Societal

  9. Promotion—Prevention—Protection Continuum

  10. Youth Driven Community Involvement Doug Ragan Environmental Youth Alliance Nadim Kara Self Help Resource Association

  11. Background The Environmental Youth Alliance in partnership with the Self Help Resource Association has facilitated a coalition of youth run agencies called Youth Driven for the past 6 years

  12. Challenges Facing Youth • 13% of students in Vancouver/ Richmond area have considered suicide • 40% have experienced discrimination • almost 40% have experienced sexual harassment

  13. Challenges Facing Youth • half of all young men have been involved in a fight • isolation and lack of social support • pressure to succeed • alienation from work, school, and family

  14. Impacts of These Challenges on Youth • negative health and mental health • poor decision-making and risk-taking behaviours • substance use, misuse and abuse • violence and risk of sexual exploitation

  15. Some common responses • YOUTH ARE… • Problems needing to be managed • Passive and grateful recipients of service • Clients to be fixed

  16. Asset Based Approaches Youth can bring: • passion • multiple skill sets • life experience • talent • knowledge • sincerity

  17. The Million $ Question How do you build on the assets youth have in order to enable them to address personal challenges and societal injustices?

  18. Traditional Approaches Working through significant adults: • youth workers • teachers • community health nurses

  19. Traditional Approaches Working through significant adults, who: • catalyze discussions • access resources • support or direct youth action

  20. Alternative Approaches What does it take for youth to self organize for social change?

  21. Youth Driven Survey 1997 As an ‘old timer’ youth agency, EYA conducts a research project on youth run groups and organizations in the City of Vancouver

  22. Youth Driven Survey Goals of the Survey: • document existing youth run entities • begin to define what “youth driven” means • explore how youth agencies function • articulate common barriers to sustaining the work

  23. Youth Driven Survey Process • surveyed 25 youth groups • received 17 responses Criteria • self-identified as youth-driven vs. youth serving • some level of autonomy / structure • active for longer than one project

  24. Youth Driven Survey TYPE OF WORK DONE BY GROUPS THAT PARTICIPATED: • sexual health education • peer support • first nations advocacy and activism • environmental programming • and much, much more...

  25. Youth Driven Survey A FOCUS ON THE CAPACITY FOR SUSTAINABILITY - WE ASKED: “What barriers prevent youth run organizations from doing their work, regardless of the type of work that they do?”

  26. Youth Driven Survey MOST COMMON BARRIERS: • FUNDING • YOUTH REPRESENTATION IN DECISION MAKING AND ACCOUNTABILITY • TRAINING • POLICY DEVELOPMENT • MEDIA RELATIONS

  27. Kicking it up a notch... YOUTH DRIVEN YOUTH ACTION COALITION (YDYA) A coalition of youth run groups, organizations and agencies working together to strengthen the capacity of youth, youth organizations, and the youth community to continue working towards social justice.

  28. Goals of Youth Driven • increase the capacity of the partner agencies in order to strengthen their ability to sustain the work • increase awareness of the community about the work youth run agencies do • identify the ‘determinants of self-organizing’ and enable youth to come together spontaneously for social change

  29. Kicking it up a notch... YOUTH IN THE CITY 1999 A high profile campaign to raise awareness (in the community at large) around the excellent work being done by youth driven groups, in conjunction with Vancouver’ civic elections.

  30. Youth Driven Organizations Have an impact on the community, but lack: • capacity for sustainability • recognition and profile • support from the community at large

  31. A SENSE OF COMMUNITY Youth Driven Organizations are usually more... • open • welcoming • accepting of diverse life experiences • accessible to youth with different abilities

  32. Characteristics of Youth Friendly Environments • youth are respected • youth are valued • the environment is fun • youth feel appreciated • youth feel safe • youth feel comfortable • there is an honest process

  33. Youth Involvement • feels meaningful, useful, important, relevant • youth are active, interested, inspired, and want to be there • “Their smile extends from their mouth to their eyes.”

  34. Youth in Charge • youth in control with support • youth taking ownership with accountability • youth making decisions with skill building • youth taking action in collaboration

  35. For more information... CONTACT: Doug Ragan, Environmental Youth Alliance doug_ragan@hotmail.com Nadim Kara, KINEX Youth Team (SHRA) nadimkara@hotmail.com

  36. Thank you for your attention!

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