The Future Is Now. The Climate and Migrations and Youth’s Agency.

Project facts

Project promoter:
The Better World Association(PL)
Project Number:
PL-ACTIVECITIZENS-NATIONAL-0193
Status:
Completed
Initial project cost:
€30,000
Final project cost:
€30,000
Programme:

Description

We want to discuss with the young people its potential and complex issues it is bringing the future, as well as provide them with tools that will allow to shape it. A lot of research suggests that many young people from rural areas “appear to be passive towards politics or social issues,” and consider talking about the “climate catastrophe” to be an exaggeration. Our project approaches the young people who are living with the migrants, or experiencing the consequences of climate change in small towns of Wielkopolska Voivodeship as experts in their everyday reality. According to the scientific prognosis, living in close proximity of representatives of other nations and cultures, as well as experiencing the changing nature might soon become a new reality for many of us. Along with four groups from local municipalities we will work on mini projects that address local ecological and migration problems. Each group will participate in a series of workshops and design appropriate actions for their municipality and help implement them. The entire process will be guided by animators and in close collaboration with experienced educators and trainers, with particular focus on independence and young people’s creativity. The groups will take part in an integration retreat, and later develop tools for conducting a debate with their peers from larger cities in their Voivodesip. Based on the observations of the designing process and interviews with the participants we will create a research report on how young people think about the future and how participation changes their perception of having agency.

Summary of project results

We wanted to create an opportunity for a conversation with youth about the future. According to research done by the Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights conducted across junior high schools (2016-2017), as well as by IPSOS on behalf of OKO.press in 2019, young people remain passive civically and politically, while conversations about the climate crisis are often perceived as exaggerations of the current situation. That trend is particularly visible among young people from rural areas, and that’s why they were the target group for our project. At the same time, the research from the Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights shows that young people are often hostile towards migrants who begin to arrive in Poland at an increasing pace due to the progressing climate change.Living in the proximity of migrants in a rapidly changing environment will be, according to many scientists, a future many of us will experience. We have engaged young members of Wielkopolska Voivodeship into thinking about the future. We have equipped them with knowledge and tools for a collaborative conversation about challenges we might soon face: climate catastrophe and increasing migrant movements.Together with four youth groups from Wielkopolska’s municipalities, we have worked on mini-projects responding to local ecological and migration problems. Each group took part in a series of workshops. Based on the diagnosis the groups have arrived at, they proposed actions for their respective municipalities and helped to implement them. The entire process was coordinated by a group of animators and in a close collaboration with experienced educators and trainers. A lot of emphasis was placed on independence and creativity of the young people. Participants in the project took part in an integration retreat and worked on developing tools for debating with their peers. Next, they have conducted workshops on talking and debating about the future for eight youth groups from across the voivodeship. Based on our observations of the designing process and interviews with our participants we have written a report on how young people think about the future and their sense of agency can be bolstered through collaborative process.Young people also had an opportunity to develop their conversational skills and our evaluation interviews showed that their participation in the project helped increase their sense of agency, as well as knowledge about migrants residing in their area and community.

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Information on the projects funded by the EEA and Norway Grants is provided by the Programme and Fund Operators in the Beneficiary States, who are responsible for the completeness and accuracy of this information.