On Monday 13th March 2023, an Interactive Youth Dialogue took place
within the CSW67 program. This was the first time (ever!) youth had a
formalized session within this important advocacy process. I got the
opportunity to deliver a statement about the issues that young people face in
relation to the priority theme as well as in their meaningful participation at
the CSW.
I was very excited to be able to speak at this event, for which many youth advocates before me have fought to become a reality. The session emphasized that young people are a powerful force in driving social change. They have valuable insights, technical knowledge, innovative ideas, and the passion needed to create a better world. But even more important: they have the fundamental right to co-decide on issues that concern them.
However, the session didn’t feel interactive (it was more an endless stream of statement ‘vomiting’), and it was unclear what was being done with the input, leaving much to improve on the strategic value of the discussion and the meaningfulness of it. To create more meaningful and inclusive spaces at the UN, where youth voices are truly heard, valued and incorporated in the outcome document, we will be providing feedback to the Bureau on behalf of the Young Feminist Caucus.
You can read my final statement here:
As
an independent youth representative, I would like to raise attention to the
following four points:
1. First, I want to speak about the
importance of accessibility. In a world that heavily relies on
technology, accessibility to technological devices, internet and data for all
girls, adolescents and youth becomes key for ensuring their meaningful
participation.
2. Secondly, I want to emphasize the
need for safety. Young women and girls in all their diversity are exposed to
sexual and gender-based violence on a daily basis. This is the reason why we
call for adding language on technology-facilitated sexual & gender-based
violence in the agreed conclusions, as lacking this language would impose a
barrier to denounce these issues.
3. All of this brings me to my third
point, which is digital content.
a. We need access to comprehensive
sexuality education, including accurate, transparent information about sexual
and reproductive health and rights. Information is power, and information
about sexual and reproductive health and rights means power over our own
bodies.
b. Lastly, for digital literacy, it
is important to actively fight misinformation and disinformation which
is currently predominant on the internet and reinforces itself, through
algorithms. This concerns us, because algorithms create echochambers in which
misinformation repeats itself like echoes, coming over and over again to youth.
4. Finally, I would like to emphasize the need for more formal spaces within the CSW for youth. I call upon states to meaningfully include youth in delegations, as I am concerned about all the empty chairs in this room.
I have spent all weekend with youth, the ones who were lucky enough to overcome visa and funding barriers as they are mostly here on a voluntary basis. Youth advocates are hidden away trying to make the best out of informal CSW spaces but still feeling unheard and excluded. We do not want youth advocates ending up with Agreed Conclusions that do not reflect their rights and needs. We trust we will see the global youth and adolescent recommendations reflected in the text, and that MS will do everything they can to not water down language on girls, especially not in the context of their participation and decision-making, as well as language mentioning youth in all their diversity, so that we don’t forget that youth is a diverse group of people, who make up the majority of the population in the world!
Thank you.
By Veerle Dams, Advocacy Coordinator at
CHOICE for Youth & Sexuality
Photocredits: UN Women
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