Representing 250 million members, Youth Organizations Work Together to Deal With The Disruptive Impact of COVID-19
World’s largest youth organizations, representing 250 million members, and WHO launch global mobilization to respond to disruptive impacts of COVID-19 on young people.
Funding for youth-oriented community programs to address COVID-19 are key features of this new mobilization.
There is no question. There are victims of COVID-19 that never have medical ailments from suffering the Coronavirus. These are the invisible victims of the pandemic whose lives were disrupted and have lost nearly a year of normal activity. From the mental stress to the lack of physical activity and the loss of academic progress, the kids of the pandemic have suffered even if they never became sick.
Now, a new ground-breaking global youth mobilization has been launched today to invest in and scale up youth-led solutions and engagements in response to COVID-19.
The Idea? Be Part of the Solution, Not the Problem
The initiative was launched by an alliance of the world’s largest youth movements and organizations, together with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Foundation.
The “Global Youth Mobilization for Generation Disrupted” is being led by the Big 6 Youth Organizations (Young Men’s Christian Association, YMCA; World Young Women’s Christian Association, YWCA; World Organization of the Scout Movement; World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts; International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, IFRC; and The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award), which together actively involve more than 250 million young people, and aims to support young people to engage in and design efforts to turn around the impact of the pandemic.
While it is not clear if any of the major youth soccer organizations in the USA will be working on this, there is a clear connection between youth sports in America and everyone’s goal of minimizing the impact of COVID-19 on young people. Youth soccer, with its outdoor high activity, is a perfect sport for young people.
The Global Youth Mobilization will feature the convening of a Global Youth Summit in April 2021, and a fund of US $5 million to support local and national youth organizations, including grants for youth-led solutions and an accelerator program to scale up existing response efforts.
The leadership of the WHO, Big 6, and youth organizations around the world are calling on governments, businesses, and policy makers to back the Global Youth Mobilization effort and commit to investing in the future of young people.
These measures will directly support young people engaged at the grassroots level to tackle some of the most pressing health and societal challenges resulting from the pandemic.
“WHO is honored to join this truly exciting and powerful global movement to mobilize and empower youth worldwide to be the driving force of the recovery to COVID-19,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “Joining forces with the Big 6 and the United Nations Foundation provides WHO and the world a unique opportunity to learn from hundreds of millions of young people and be guided by their sustainable solutions to help communities build back better from the pandemic.”
While the direct health impacts of the pandemic on young people have been generally less severe …
Kids are disproportionately affected by the long-lasting consequences of the pandemic.
Such effects include disruptions to education, economic uncertainty, loss or lack of employment opportunities, impacts on physical and mental health, and trauma from domestic violence.
For example, mental anxiety brought on by COVID-19 has been identified in nearly 90 percent of young people.
More than 1 billion students in almost every country have been impacted by school closures.
1 in 6 young people worldwide have lost their jobs during the pandemic.
The Global Youth Mobilization will draw attention to the urgent need for solutions to support young people, and to highlight the critical leadership role young people are playing in their communities to counter the effects of the pandemic.
“We are proud to team up with the WHO to provide opportunities and funding to help millions of young people across the globe to respond to local challenges related to COVID-19 in their communities,” said the leadership of the Big 6 in a joint statement. “The mobilization will provide direct financial and programmatic support to youth organizations at the national and international level. We believe that young people have the solutions to solve their own problems, and by providing a global youth platform, combined with national activation for youth projects, we can unleash the skills, enthusiasm, and desire for young people to be a force for good in their communities.”
Supported by the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund for WHO and powered by the United Nations Foundation, the Global Youth Mobilization features a strategic partnership with the WHO and its newly launched Youth Council. It will involve other United Nations agencies, as well as a number of high-profile global partners, brands, and advocates, from FIFA to YOUNGA by BridgingTheGap Ventures, and the creation of a youth council of social media influencers, including the Influential platform.
The initiative, developed in consultation with young people from across the globe, will be youth-led, community-driven, evidence-based, and inclusive of diverse communities rooted in meaningful youth participation and engagement.
Did you know the Big 6 Youth Organizations was formed in 1996 by Big 6 Youth Organizations? This alliance of leading international youth-serving organizations includes the five largest youth movements in the world: Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA), World Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA), World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM), World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS), International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and a leading programme for youth development, The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award (The Award).
Together, the Big 6 actively involve in excess of 250 million young people, contributing to the empowerment of more than 1 billion young people during the last century.