The winning Good Practices on Youth Engagement and Leadership in COVID-19 response 

The winning Good Practices on Youth Engagement and Leadership in COVID-19 response 

In August, YES! – the Collective Service’s Youth Engagement subgroup, led by UNICEF, UNAIDS, and the Collective Helpdesk, with the support of UN WOMEN, UNFPA and the Youth Compact put out an open call for the submission of good practices on youth engagement and leadership in COVID-19 response.  

A jury composed of YES! members reviewed and rated 45 eligible good practices from over 81 submissions, coming from different regions (EAPR, ECAR, MENA, ROSA, WCAR) and submitted by local NGOs, as well as UNAIDS, UNICEF and UN WOMEN Country Offices.  

Based on the scoring criteria, the 7 best-rated practices have been selected – 3 on Youth Engagement, 3 on Youth Leadership + 1 unique inter-agency good practice by UNICEF and the Micronesian Red Cross. 
 

These will be made into case studies and practical guidance on operationalizing the lessons learned, which will be promoted to inspire organizations to use them as a reference on engaging youth in future pandemic responses
 

Here are the winning good practices on Youth Engagement:  

  1. “A day in our lives series- young people across Australia sharing their story during COVID-19.” Submitted by Multicultural Youth Advocacy Network (MYAN) Australia.  
  1. “Adolescent Girls Education Empowerment and Participation Project.” Submitted by Global Partnership for Education (GPE) funded by UNICEF Guinea Bissau.  
  1. “Training of Volunteers on COVID-19 community sensitization.”  Submitted by Young Urban Women’s Movement Ghana.
  1. “How the Micronesian Red Cross Society youths led the fight against COVID in the FSM.” Submitted jointly by UNICEF and Micronesia Red Cross Society

And on Youth Leadership: 
 

  1. “Jannatul Mouwa: Story of her COVID Response.” Submitted by Bindu Women Movement supported by the UN WOMEN Bangladesh. 
  1. “Leadership skills and Economic Empowerment during COVID.” Submitted by NGO Dar Abu Abdallah (DAA) funded by UNICEF Jordan. 
  1. “Youth-led Action Research on the impact of COVID-19 on marginalized youth.” Submitted by the Asia South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult Education (ASPBAE). 

By promoting these case studies, YES! will further its efforts on advocating for the inclusion of young people and youth leadership as a part of coordination and response to future public health emergencies, as well as humanitarian crises.  
 

The Ebola Outbreak: What Journalists Need to Know

The Ebola Outbreak: What Journalists Need to Know

To gain the latest information on the disease, and to get advice on how to deal with the stigma and rumours that are surrounding this latest Ebola outbreak, the ESAR RCCE Media Dialogue is featuring two speakers on different aspects of this health emergency. Dr. Otim Patrick Cossy Ramadan, Health Emergency Officer, Emergency Preparedness and Response (EPR) Cluster, World Health Organization in Brazzaville, to explain the science of Ebola and the latest on spread and containment.

Dr. Michael Gubay of South Sudan will share his experience dealing with Ebola outbreaks and he’ll provide some guidance for journalists on how to avoid repeating false info, stereotypes, and stigmatizing of people based on the names given to Ebola strains.