SDG Media Zone Conversations at the 2026 ECOSOC Youth Forum
More than a thousand young leaders, innovators, and advocates [...]
More than a thousand young leaders, innovators, and advocates [...]
? Accelerating the COVID-19 recovery and full implementation of the [...]
The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Youth Forum will take [...]
The SDG Media Zone engages influencers, innovators and youth leaders in lively discussions on how young people are actively working to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.
Youth leaders, gathered at the two-day Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Youth Forum, voiced alarm that 11 years before the 2030 deadline, progress on the Sustainable Development Goals remains slow, including on climate change ¨C the greatest challenge of the world of today and tomorrow.
Held on the sidelines of the ECOSOC Youth Forum, the SDG Media Zone engages influencers, innovators and youth leaders in lively discussions on how young people are actively working to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.?
On 8 and 9 April, nearly 1,000 youth advocates from around the world are expected to meet with government ministers and officials at the Âé¶¹APP this month to advance the role of young people in implementing of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The?World Youth Report focuses on youth education and employment, and explores the complex challenges facing the largest generation of youth the world has ever seen.
Youth 2030: The Âé¶¹APP Youth Strategy envisions a world in which the human rights of every young person are realized so they can achieve their full potential to advance sustainable development and peace.
The world¡¯s young people need safe spaces ¨C both physical [...]
21-year-old Sona Sridhar, winner of the inaugural UNICEF Climate Comic [...]
Young people must be involved at all levels of policy-making and in all processes that affect them, including in the design of national plans, according to a summary statement issued at the end of a Âé¶¹APP forum on youth.
Today's young people are more connected, dynamic and engaged than ever and the Global Goals can¡¯t happen without them, speakers told an annual Âé¶¹APP forum, where young leaders called on the Organization keep its promise to ¡®leave no one behind¡¯ on the road to creating a prosperous world for everyone on a clean planet.
Not content to follow old-school rules to tackle problems like climate change, poverty and inequality, today¡¯s youth ¨C media savvy ¡®Millennials¡¯ and the ¡®Born in the 90s¡¯ cohort that can¡¯t remember life without the Internet ¨C are using disruptive, new-school innovations to drive change; and they¡¯re heading to the Âé¶¹APP to talk about building a better world for all.
On the first day of the school holidays, fifty-two children braved the cold weather - and the temptation to spend a Monday morning at home - to come to the Public Library of Ariana, a town near Tunis, for a writing workshop on the SDGs. They were in for a surprise; the organizers greeted them with an SDG-branded toolkit with pens, pencils, copybooks, stationery and everything they needed to unleash their creativity.
South Sudan's children are facing a raft of daily horrors and deprivations and urgently require a peaceful, protective environment, the Âé¶¹APP Children's Fund (UNICEF) said Friday, warning that ¡°anything less, places children and women at even greater risk of grave violations and abuse.¡±
Governments and the private sector have not kept up with the game-changing pace of digital technologies, exposing children to new risks and harms ¨C both on and offline ¨C and leaving millions of the most disadvantaged behind, the Âé¶¹APP Children's Fund (UNICEF) said Monday in a new report.