Logo image
'Empowering youth as change agents for climate change in South Africa': challenges, caveats and course corrections
Journal article   Peer reviewed

'Empowering youth as change agents for climate change in South Africa': challenges, caveats and course corrections

Coleen Vogel, Desirée Kosciulek, Ditebogo Lebea, Tyler Booth, Bright Nkrumah and Marj Brown
Journal of youth studies, Vol.25(6), pp.812-832
07-03-2022

Abstract

change-makers Climate Action Plan ecosystem vulnerabilities Youth activists Climate Change
Africa is one of the most vulnerable continents to climate change (CC), warming at 'double the global average rate'. The southern African region is already a CC hotspot with climate variability exposing stark societal and biophysical ecosystem vulnerabilities. South African and southern African youth are beginning to claim their place at various CC negotiation tables adding to the voices of government and various civil society groups. In this paper, written by a group of youth activists, civil society organisation leaders, educators and climate scientists, we track the journey that a group of young change-makers and local government officials (in the age range 15-24) have taken in securing a seat at the policy table. The challenges, caveats and course corrections that have been taken in the Johannesburg Youth Climate Action Plan (YCAP) process and the wider country, are interrogated. This YCAP Johannesburg experiment provides a useful learning exercise for subsequent CC policy and practice engagements in the country and elsewhere.
url
Link to published article.View

Related links

Details

Logo image