Proud to share that our President & CEO, Cynthia Steele, took part in the side event Championing Youth Centrality: Co-creating Innovative Solutions for Livelihoods with, for, and by Young People co-hosted by Generation Unlimited, Global Partnership for Education, and World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) at the 2025 ECOSOC Youth Forum. Thank you, Generation Unlimited, for convening such an inspiring space. It was heartening to see this critical conversation take place on a global platform, centring young people not just as beneficiaries, but as co-creators of solutions. Cynthia highlighted what we at EMpower deeply believe: young people's vision, leadership, and innovation must remain at the heart of development efforts. 💫
Young people are not just future leaders—they are today’s co-creators of change. Generation Unlimited (GenU), the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), and the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) co-hosted “Championing Youth Centrality: Co-creating Innovative Solutions for Livelihoods with, for, and by Young People”—a high-energy side event at the 2025 ECOSOC Youth Forum in New York. Here are the top highlights: 1. Youth Centrality in Action From education and skills to entrepreneurship and employment, youth must be at the heart of system design, governance, and delivery. As Kevin Frey (CEO, GenU) put it, “Youth should be at the table—but at the right table, where they’re making decisions.” 2. Public-Private-Youth Partnerships (PPYPs) Work The event showcased real-world examples of PPYPs—such as the Youth Empowerment Fund and national youth councils—where young people hold decision-making power and funding authority. 3. Systemic Change Starts with Shared Leadership Youth leaders like Melissa El Feghali and Joshua Opey stressed the need for institutional mechanisms that ensure young people are not just heard, but trusted, paid, and empowered to lead. 4. Education Must Evolve—Fast From India’s national youth platform to Kenya’s competency-based education, speakers emphasized the urgent need to bridge the gap between education systems and labour markets. “We can’t transform education without transforming who holds power in designing the systems and processes,” said GPE’s B. Foluyinka Fakoya. 5. Recognizing All Forms of Learning Young people are calling for validation of lived experiences, non-formal education, and activism. Nada Zamel reminded us: “We should address political and structural barriers, ensuring youth are able to co-create and co-design economic policies that affect them.” 6. Emotional Wellbeing is Part of the Solution Kapwani Kavenuke stressed that creating livelihoods is not just technical—it’s emotional. Youth programs must embed wellbeing and mental health support. 7. Building Systems for the Many, Not the Few Youth advocate Nhial Deng challenged all stakeholders to think beyond elite spaces and ensure equity for all young people. 8. From Dialogue to Action The work doesn’t stop with a forum—it must lead to investment, policy shifts, and new ways of working with and for young people. The takeaway? This event wasn’t just a conversation—it is a call to action. Let’s co-create, co-invest, and co-deliver sustainable futures – together. #SkillsRightNow #FundEducation #WorldScouting