On 11 July, as communities everywhere observe World Population Day, UNFPA calls for investments in support of the largest-ever generation of young people. Today, there are about 1.8 billion young people – those aged 10 to 24 – comprising roughly one quarter of the world’s population. Their aspirations and achievements will shape the future. “We know that healthy, educated, productive and fully engaged young people can help break the cycle of intergenerational poverty and are more resilient in the face of individual and societal challenges,” said Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, Executive Director of UNFPA, in a statement. “As skilled and informed citizens, they can contribute more fully to their communities and nations.” Yet too many youth continue to grapple with poverty, inequality and human rights violations that prevent them from reaching their personal and collective potential. An estimated 515 million adolescents and youth, aged 15 to 24, live on less than $2 a day, according to UNESCO, and millions more face gender discrimination and other forms of marginalization. A world of potential A safe, healthy passage from adolescence into adulthood is the right of every child. To fulfil this right, families and societies must ensure that adolescents and youth acquire the knowledge and skills required to lead productive and fulfilling lives. But the majority of youth are growing up in low-income countries, where education and health services are not guaranteed, according to the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Global Review Report , published earlier this year. For too many, reproductive health care is difficult to access, and jobs are limited. Yet today’s youth have higher expectations than the generations before them, with a stronger grasp of their rights and a clearer vision of what they are capable of accomplishing – should they receive the proper tools and opportunities. Investing in this generation must be a global priority, the ICPD review report states. This includes protecting their human rights and ensuring their access to quality education and health care, including sexual and reproductive health services. It also includes ensuring access to decent employment opportunities. Such measures will help ensure young people have the means to improve not only their own lives, but also the lives of future generations. Mounting vulnerabilities While adolescence should be a time of growing possibilities, too many young people find are faced with mounting vulnerabilities instead. In 2012, 63 million adolescents around the world were not enrolled in either primary or secondary school, according to recent figures from UNESCO. And in 2013, young people aged 15 to 24 were almost three times more likely than adults to be unemployed, indicates a report by the International Labour Organization . In many regions, girls and young women fare worse, not only in terms of education and employment but also in terms of human rights. Too many girls are pulled from school to be married, part of a cycle of abuses that includes child marriage, adolescent pregnancy and increased risk of injury or death during childbirth. “For millions of young people around the world, puberty – the biological onset of adolescence – brings not only changes to their bodies, but also new vulnerabilities to human rights abuses, particularly in the areas of sexuality, marriage and childbearing,” said Dr. Osotimehin. Giving youth a voice UNFPA works with partners, including governments, civil society and UN agencies, to advocate for policies supporting youth. UNFPA’s programmes promote young people’s access to comprehensive sexuality education and quality sexual and reproductive health services – including voluntary family planning. UNFPA also supports youth leadership and participation initiatives to help ensure young people have a voice in decisions affecting them. “We and our partners are seeing how critical early investments in sexual and reproductive health can enhance the lives of young people and the welfare of their societies,” Dr. Osotimehin said, adding: “A sustainable future depends on having resilient populations, which cannot be achieved without investments in young people.” |