Search for the Youth Agenda on Governance
By: Ana Martha Galindes with Patricia Nicdao. This article first appeared in Center for International Private Enterprise.

Youth participants and advocates share insights and discuss issues during an iLEAD workshop held in the University of the Philippines Diliman in September 2018.
With increasing challenges in democratic spaces and values around the world, can the youth still claim its space in nation building? This has been the question that guides us as we launched discussions with different young individuals in recent months for our project, The Government We Want.
This initiative springboards from the premise that with innovative platforms and voice-giving conversations encouraging healthy and pluralistic discourse, the Filipino youth can reinvigorate their generation’s democratic project towards influencing the quality of politics and governance in the Philippines. With INNOVATE-GOV as an anchor program, this project also finds value in multi-stakeholder participation and meaningful partnerships. It aims to break down the barriers of political colors and demographics as different youth groups sit down to talk about and define the kind of governance they want for the country.

Czarina Medina-Guce (center), Executive Director of iLEAD, speaks on a panel celebrating youth’s role in advocating for good governance at INNOVATE-GOV’s Good Governance National Summit on October 9, 2018. [Photo from CIPE]
- Youth is a powerful sector. In the Philippines, a country that has gone through multiple societal transformations, the youth sector remains a powerful force. They constitute 29% of the Philippine population and almost half of total registered voters in the country. Whether out in the streets or within their own circles, Filipino youth continues to forward their agenda on various socio-political matters. They can potentially shift narratives and innovate on solutions in pursuit of development and democracy.
- Youth adapts and re-invents. While frequently tagged as inexperienced or too idealistic, the youth continuously proves to be a relevant segment of society. The youth continues to innovate, re-create and explore creative means to reinterpret politics and governance in manners that they are comfortable with. As much as they seem to veer away from traditional political processes, like enlisting in political parties or attending government-sanctioned assemblies, we see them thrive in online spaces and intimate forms of activism. They talk to their colleagues, integrate social consciousness in their online posts, and engage in conversations that are issue-based rather than politically polarizing.
- Youth banks not on age but on ‘why.’ The youth in development sector primarily anchor on their purpose more than their age in making their advocacy work. They go back to their ‘why,’ and it is their personal experiences and viewpoints that fuel them to act and constantly innovate on solutions. They recognize the need for allies and support and attach significance to collaborations and multi-stakeholder partnerships in sustaining their work. In our discussions with the network, we witnessed how different organizations, of different tracks and sectors, can effectively build on the capacities, ideas, and resources of each other and collaborate on ways to further their visions.