Ahead of COP26, the Commonwealth Secretariat yesterday in collaboration with the University of Cambridge Research Centre of Resilience and Sustainable Development launched phase two of the ‘Our Action, Our Future’ project aimed at helping guide much-needed policy change to empower youth in Small Island Developing States.
Investment in youth and biodiversity
Yesterday, 20 world-class experts from around the Commonwealth joined two virtual consultations focussed on how to help attract sustainable finance for investment in youth and biodiversity in SIDS.
Speaking at the opening of the meeting, Commonwealth Secretary-General, the Rt Hon Patricia Scotland QC said:
“Small Island Developing States are facing some of the worst impacts of climate change. COP26, which has long been on the horizon, is now squarely in our sights. It is both a complex, layered, technical process and an intensely political negotiation. We will go to Glasgow with the determination to put the voices of SIDS at the heart of global dialogue. The Commonwealth Charter makes it clear that the future success of our family of nations rests with the continued commitment and contributions of young people.”
Youth empowerment is a key priority
Of the Commonwealth’s 2.5 billion citizens, 60% are under the age of 35, and youth empowerment is a key priority for the Commonwealth Secretariat.
The expert consultations follow on from a Youth Climate Action Policy Boot Camp held in May 2021, where young people offered a range of fresh ideas to key policy challenges, such as:
Investing in the SIDS youth education systems developed with the SIDS experts and for the SIDS citizen.
Match retired and expert SIDS diaspora with the local youth to improve social capital along with economic multipliers effects.
Deep dive analysis
These ideas helped formulate this second phase of the project and earlier this month the RSPD team conducted a deep dive analysis on how the political-economic situations of SIDS are captured in global indexes used to determine concessional financing.
During phase two, sustainable investment propositions for participating countries that could help attract sustainable finance for investment in youth and biodiversity will also be considered.
One of the young participants of the ‘Our Action, Our Future’ project, 24-year-old Christianne Zakour, spoke about her motivations for joining. Christianne is a master’s student in Biodiversity and Conservation from Trinidad and Tobago.
“My generation are the inheritors and rights holders of the future with significant capacity and drive to make changes for the better. In this action research project, the team of researchers and policy leaders get together to capture the value of youth, convert the youth as an asset class so that our action and future can be aligned, ” she said.
Pivotal moment in time
Speaking about the need for this initiative, Secretary-General Scotland said:
“We are living through a pivotal moment in time, confronting the urgency of converging environmental and economic crises. Young people today are being disproportionately affected by the long-lasting and long-standing impacts of climate change and the pandemic, all the while inheriting a planet in political and ecological cross-fire. Now the challenge is to give these ideas, and the work we are undertaking throughout this project, practical application. This task is vital. It is also urgent.”
Our Action, Our Future
‘Our Action, Our Future’ participant and newly appointed research volunteer, Christianne Zakour made a video statement about the event.