Global Youth Action Network: Difference between revisions

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*[[United Network of Young Peacebuilders (UNOY Peacebuilders)]]
*[[United Network of Young Peacebuilders (UNOY Peacebuilders)]]
*[[TakingITGlobal]]
*[[TakingITGlobal]]
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_child_international Peace Child International]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_child_international Peace Child International]
*[[Higher Ground for Humanity]]
*[[Higher Ground for Humanity]]
*[[Youth council]]
*[[Youth council]]

Revision as of 12:04, 20 June 2008

Uniting youth movements

The Global Youth Action Network (GYAN) is an international network of youth NGOs spanning 180 countries, and headquartered in New York, near the United Nations. GYAN is a youth-led not for profit organization (registered in 2001, New York [USA], under section 501[c]3) that incubates global partnerships and increases youth participation in decision-making. GYAN has registered chapters in Brazil, Colombia, France, Ghana, Mexico, and South Africa, with teams working out of an additional eight countries.

GYAN is known for co-coordinating Global Youth Service Day, a program of Youth Service America, since its launch in 2000. These have grown into the world's largest annual celebration of young volunteers, with millions of participants. The organization has also worked to increase youth participation and channel youth voices into policy-making at international institutions, such as the United Nations, where it holds Special Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), and Affiliate Status with the Department of Public Information.

GYAN catalogs and helps to connect youth groups to each other, to information, resources and opportunities that empower their work for social change. Membership is open to any organization that does not promote hatred or violence towards others, and that is youth-led, youth-serving or youth-friendly. GYAN's 600 member organizations help determine future priorities for the Network, working to implement a "5-Level Model of Effective Youth Organizing", based on Integral theory and 10 years of organizing experience.

Through a partnership with TakingITGlobal, an active Internet community of student organizers, vounteers and activitists, GYAN has helped to catalog more than 10,000 youth organizations on-line. GYAN's YouthLinkExpress e-newsletter reaches 12,000 subscribing individuals, institutions and leaders in the youth development and other sectors.

Mission

The Global Youth Action Network aims to:

  • incease youth participation and intergenerational partnership in decision-making
  • facilitate greater collaboration among youth organizations
  • create support and broader recognition for positive youth action

Vision

GYAN envisions millions of young people working together towards a more just, peaceful and sustainable world, where youth are seen as key stakeholders and are active participants in the design of their future. GYAN believes that critical issues facing the planet today demand every generation's attention and action, and that youth are instrumental in movements for positive social change.

Programs

GYAN also helps to organize the following initiatives:

  • Global Youth Service Day
  • Youth Movement for Democracy
  • Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS
  • Local Jam
  • Chat the Planet TV
  • Global Youth Action Awards
  • Millennium Development Goals Youth Campaign
  • G-Sync

History

The Global Youth Action Network evolved out of the United Nations Youth Assembly Project, proposed by 18-year old Benjamin Quinto in 1996, and the work of other young organizers, including Bremley Lyngdoh and Jonah Wittkamper. During the Hague Appeal for Peace (May, 1999, The Netherlands), and the United Youth Conference (July 1999, USA), young people helped to reshape the project and launch the Global Youth Action Network. GYAN opened its New York Headquarters in January, 2000, under the fiscal sponsorship of the One Day Foundation and Youth In Action, then incorporated the following year.

Hoaxes

Internet hoaxes and phishing scams are now including youth conferences. These are promoted on-line, often via e-mail, promising free transportation and visa arrangements for participation in a conference, after a registration fee has been paid. Some scams now include elaborate bogus web sites and similarly named organizations.

GYAN works to educate and warn the public, especially young people in the social sector, about these hoaxes, and an alert regarding "hoax conferences" is featured on the GYAN website. GYAN has been the target of several such scams -- see, for example, the bogus web site at http://www.globalyouthaction.org.

See also

References

External links