Friday 14 September 2012

Nepali Youth:Policy Makers!


Nepali Youth:  The Policy Makers
 The Nepali Youth is out on the streets. The youth of Nepal is burning tyres and shouting slogans. It is on Facebook pages, “liking” Miss Nepal Shristi Shrestha and contributing to the country’s growing cyber presence. It is creating events to support charities. The Youth of Nepal is undoubtedly the most effective tool to propagate social and political agendas. They are the force behind political parties to perpetuate violence. It is the Youth that bears the scars of  “latthi charges”.
But what is missing in youth participation is their involvement in the policy-making structure.  There is more to youth than just physical strength and impulsive ambitions. There is the power in the youth to work at a policy level if guided in the right way. It is the country’s responsibility to not only to use them a perpetrators of change. The youth needs to create the change they are a part of. There are reservations for women and other minorities in politics. Maybe it is time to create effective policies that invest similar provisions for the youth so that they can actively become a part of the policy-making sector.

They have to play an important role, not only in implementing decisions; they need to be mobilized to take those decisions themselves.

Becoming The Youth of Nepal:

There are three major parts that needs to be kept in mind, in case of youths and preparing them to be active in bringing about reforms. The first one involves preparing young adolescents for their roles as tomorrow’s youths. Making them look forward to becoming the change.  Encouraging them with incentives and inserting community building and social responsibility much more rigorously in the mainstream curriculum.  They need to be groomed into becoming resourceful and impactful. And this does not start at the onset of their 18th year. It should start as soon as they are old enough to understand that the power of tomorrow lies in their hands.
Nine and tenth graders are warned of the pending “iron gate” they have to pass in the next few years. A fifteen year old spends an entire year, locked up in a room rotting a science syllabus and the time he/she manages to come out of that room is usually instances where he is surrounded by relatives questioning him/her why are they not in that room.
That fifteen-year-old is missing out on community service on debates, on discussions. There is a dire need to chalk out a plan that balances the schoolwork and community work. Because their hard work  and participation, contributes to the greater good of the community. So why not start at the very beginning of this symbiotic cycle?

The bottom line is there needs to be platforms or 12, 13, 14, 15 year olds to make them realize that tomorrow the world is theirs, and they need to start by getting involved today.

The National Youth Policy 2010 mentions that it aims “To support individual and social development including education, employment and career of the youths who are in the course of imparting education and in the sensitive stage of establishing their identity in the society”
 Molding children from a young age and preparing them to become the youth of tomorrow is the first step in the game.  Establishing institutions where these children can learn of their opportunities and possibilities and shaping them to become critical thinkers of  the national building process and  making them into champions of reform should start from the very beginning of an individual’s learning graph. 
Another crucial factor in preparing young adults is connecting youths from different parts of the country. The urban iPhone Generation is as Nepali as the farmer’s kid in a remote village of Nepal.  One example:  Establishing a Pen-pal system in schools across the country. Making the pen-pal system a compulsory part of social studies, where a child from two different places in Nepal are allowed to connect. If such initiatives are inculcated into children from a very young age then we could be successful in fostering understanding and oneness between children from two different backgrounds, who share a similar culture and national identity.

Nepali Youth: The Policy-maker:
Second is youth participation in policy level. What this country needs is policy level intervention in ensuring that youths are not only agents of change, but also the change themselves.  The National Youth Policy (Nepal) 2010 states that:
 The State has to pursue a concrete policy in order to institutionalize federal democratic republic in consonance with the inclusive, proportional and equal development principles, to maintain national independence and sovereignty of Nepal, materialize the potentiality of youth leadership in the economic, social, political and cultural transformation and ensure the active participation of the youths in each and every process of state functionality. (2010)

Well- prepared youth can contribute effectually to the policy-making process.  And policy-makers are obliged to enable the youth to do so.  The government needs to set up watch-dogs to inquire and investigate to see if the objectives of the National Youth Policy 2010 are met or not.  For the National Youth Policy to recognize its goal, it should reflect on the feedback from the youth, and  employ the youths themselves to    follow the progress chart. 
    Inculcating youth leaders from different strata of the Nepalese society into contributing to policy-making, and teaming those youth leaders with counterparts who might not share their leadership quality, but have the intellect and are potential social experts, will churn into a valuable policy-making concoction indeed!   Not every body is a leader and not everybody is a policy-maker. But if teamed together they hold the power to identify the changes needed and mobilize fellow youths.  This pool of youth potential is the country’s strongest uphold. Including them as board members of corporation, electing them as direct members of various civil society organizations is a perfect chance to involve them in nation building. Putting youth leaders in the policy-making forefront sends a message to millions of youths across Nepal.   Creating examples, gives the young leaders of tomorrow some one to look up to. Bringing out young decision-makers to deliberate policies on youths will mark Nepal’s development and an overall positive change in attitude.  Most importantly, youth leaders should be trained and encouraged to mobilize the generation younger than them as well.If  political leaders, lawyers doctors  are mentors of the youth who want to follow their footsteps, then those youths should be mentors of  a younger generation, so that they can  derive inspiration and look forward to becoming  champions of Reform.  
           The World Movement for Democracy  (a global network of democrats, including activists, practitioners, academics, policy makers and funder) in its  “Youth in Policy Making” section in the website talks about projects and groups that promote youth involvement. It lists, “Some of the skills, taught on- and offline, include: organizing coalitions, running an issues-based campaign, writing effective letters to elected officials, and using the internet to engage in policy debates.” These activities if facilitated by the youths themselves who are involved in policy-making would be effective in creating concrete change at policy level.
Youth is not only a Youth:
      Take a hypothetical instance; we are making a policy to make the “environment cleaner.”  Here we have a 60-year-old professor who has more than 30 years of experience in the field.  And we have a 27-year-old post-graduate student, who also has a degree in environmental science from a (hypothetical) college in Norway. This 27-year-old was the president of the environment club in her university and successfully organized and designed campaigns in her university, which involved mobilizing each and every staff, old and young in making the camps cleaner.  How valuable would that team of 60-year-old expert and 27-year-old youth expert be in developing strategies to launch a nation-wide campaign to mobilize?
       Where experience of an expert meets the zeal of Newcomer, there blossoms a mentor and a student who can build dreams together, where the experience can leave behind the legacy, knowing the newcomer will carry the torch forward.
       Involving the youth in areas beyond youth issues is a way of letting them know that there are more responsibilities they have to take up.  One of the objectives of The National Youth Policy of Nepal 2010 reads, “To develop and expand the role and potentiality of the youths in the nation building and national development.”
         While involving the youth in policy-making, the government and non-government actors should mobilize the talent into using them to deliberate policies outside the youth. The Youth Factor of policy making should be implied on environment and climate change policies, on other social issues of concern, the unemployment scenario etc. In a nutshell, the youth of Nepal should not be limited to being youth; they need to be actively integrated into nation building as a whole.
          Let me insert a perfect example here: Youth Senate program by the International Foundation in cooperation with the Haitian Parliament, the Haitian Ministry of Education, the Parliament of Quebec, and Associates in Rural Development:

                      Students were selected though and essay competition to become youth senators who then spent several days in Port-au-Prince learning about policy making process in Haiti and participated in a mock parliament. They proposed and debated a number of laws, and passed laws mandating to increase environmental protection and improve.


      And, speaking about youth participation in environmental issues, here is a shout out to the Nepali Youth Task Force  which participated in the Rio +20 Summit.  The team   has been organizing different activities in rural and urban area. Their involvement in mobilizing the youth and participating in the summit is a perfect example of youth-power mobilized to participate in solution-discussion and utilization of their potential into mobilizing their generational counterparts.  There are many other instances of youth-led organizations in Nepal that are organizing interaction programs and discussion. There needs to be a state mechanism to hand pick such efforts, glorify their importance and effectively set examples for those who inspire to follow footsteps and even start a legacy of their own.
     Encouraging more and more activities that recognize the youth’s effort, motivates young entrepreneurs. Government should stet up incentives to felicitate youths who have become champions in various sectors of society, including business, online-activism, non-profit and sports.  Different types of talents should be used to encourage youths to actively participate and contribute in one way or the other. 
         Fostering youths to become champions of reform is like practicing for a tennis game. Both sides wont become perfect until this partnership is synchronized and there is an understanding between the two. The Nepali Youth has shown its potential and energy in Modern Nepal. Now it is up to the government and non-government actors to correctly utilize them, insert provision to allow the youth to become successful leaders of tomorrow and provide them a platform to   voice their concerns and offer solutions to the country’s problems.

    As post-conflict Nepal struggles to establish new policies and principles, the role of youth has become even more profound. The youth played an extremely important role in ushering in the revolutions that started the dawn of a New Nepal. As the country transitions into nation building, integrating the youth into making policies-both youth oriented and other issues is important. Youth feedback is important to establish effective policies. Stakeholders need to keep in mind two important thing while mobilizing the power of youth to make them champions of reform: Promoting adolescents and preparing them to become leaders of tomorrow and  innovating  youths in the policymaking structure. Listening to the youth and their solution to the problem, not only expecting the youth to  follow orders because, youth is the nation’s strongest army. 

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