This 2014 day of democracy brings to the fore a great question facing the youth of the world and especially in countries in the Middle East and North Africa. How can widespread and apparently uncompromising socio-economic despondency be addressed in a sustainable manner?
The answer lies is an applied action, through participatory democracy that engages individuals and communities in dialog and consensus-building, with the goal of identifying their development challenges and opportunities and creating a plan for shared action to achieve priority projects.
In Morocco, the situation of its youth (who are four out five of the unemployed aged 15 to 34) is a good reflection of other nations of the region. One can easily acquire a heavy heart when hearing of their common challenges: the majority living at home throughout their 20s, often delaying marriage because they cannot afford their accommodation; young, educated women passing days and years at the family home without acquiring the skills to find a job and without adequate jobs being available; rural girls' education regularly cut short after primary school as families are without means to send them to middle and high schools and may, in any case, place a higher value on boys' education.
Perhaps the highest source of frustration is that Moroccan youth live in a society replete with opportunities for social action and economic growth of which they may be unaware, having faced such difficulties in their early life that they commonly believe no such opportunities could exist.
Engaging youthful energy wisely is surely one of the most pressing objectives currently faced. This day of democracy brings to mind a solution that has proven itself over decades, particularly by way of development experiences undertaken since WWII -- participatory democratic planning.
The process involves applying open dialog procedures for groups to evaluate both their past project development experiences and their current priority needs. In this way they gain greater self-reliance and empowerment to create the change that they seek in their lives, take control of their own analysis and investigation, and thus become responsible for project implementation through the entire cycle, from design to management and evaluation.
This development approach has now become synonymous with sustainability because project evaluations have identified that local participation is at least as critical as finance in order to achieve project continuity and overall success.
When youth are equipped with the skills and know-how to help forge their communities and society as a reflection of their common will, through democratic means, real optimism supplants frustration, as jobs, as well as improvements in education and health, are generated. This important day therefore points to an actual tool that needs to be given the opportunity to be utilised in people's lives. Programmees should be implemented that are dedicated not to predetermined projects but to those initiatives that youth identify for themselves and where technical expertise is not sector-specific but comprises vital 'soft' skills with a multiplicity of applications such as negotiation, listening, building partnerships, and attaining inclusivity.
This highlighting by the UN of the principle of democracy is to be commended and appreciated. Today's youth face deeply entrenched problems. At the same time, it is they who are ultimately humanity's only hope. Enabling them to experience and achieve sustainable development through participatory democracy is indeed the light they quietly -- and not so quietly -- seek.
Yossef Ben-Meir, PhD, is president of the High Atlas Foundation, a non-profit organisation dedicated to sustainable development in Morocco. Comments: yossef@highatlasfoundation.org
Let's engage young people on this the UN International Day of Democracy
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The answer lies is an applied action, through participatory democracy that engages individuals and communities in dialog and consensus-building, with the goal of identifying their development challenges and opportunities and creating a plan for shared action to achieve priority projects.
In Morocco, the situation of its youth (who are four out five of the unemployed aged 15 to 34) is a good reflection of other nations of the region. One can easily acquire a heavy heart when hearing of their common challenges: the majority living at home throughout their 20s, often delaying marriage because they cannot afford their accommodation; young, educated women passing days and years at the family home without acquiring the skills to find a job and without adequate jobs being available; rural girls' education regularly cut short after primary school as families are without means to send them to middle and high schools and may, in any case, place a higher value on boys' education.
Perhaps the highest source of frustration is that Moroccan youth live in a society replete with opportunities for social action and economic growth of which they may be unaware, having faced such difficulties in their early life that they commonly believe no such opportunities could exist.
Engaging youthful energy wisely is surely one of the most pressing objectives currently faced. This day of democracy brings to mind a solution that has proven itself over decades, particularly by way of development experiences undertaken since WWII -- participatory democratic planning.
The process involves applying open dialog procedures for groups to evaluate both their past project development experiences and their current priority needs. In this way they gain greater self-reliance and empowerment to create the change that they seek in their lives, take control of their own analysis and investigation, and thus become responsible for project implementation through the entire cycle, from design to management and evaluation.
This development approach has now become synonymous with sustainability because project evaluations have identified that local participation is at least as critical as finance in order to achieve project continuity and overall success.
When youth are equipped with the skills and know-how to help forge their communities and society as a reflection of their common will, through democratic means, real optimism supplants frustration, as jobs, as well as improvements in education and health, are generated. This important day therefore points to an actual tool that needs to be given the opportunity to be utilised in people's lives. Programmees should be implemented that are dedicated not to predetermined projects but to those initiatives that youth identify for themselves and where technical expertise is not sector-specific but comprises vital 'soft' skills with a multiplicity of applications such as negotiation, listening, building partnerships, and attaining inclusivity.
This highlighting by the UN of the principle of democracy is to be commended and appreciated. Today's youth face deeply entrenched problems. At the same time, it is they who are ultimately humanity's only hope. Enabling them to experience and achieve sustainable development through participatory democracy is indeed the light they quietly -- and not so quietly -- seek.
Yossef Ben-Meir, PhD, is president of the High Atlas Foundation, a non-profit organisation dedicated to sustainable development in Morocco. Comments: yossef@highatlasfoundation.org
Let's engage young people on this the UN International Day of Democracy
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