Research findings highlight how participation empowers children and young people as active agents of change in their communities and beyond

Research on Ireland’s Children and Young People’s Assembly on Biodiversity Loss highlights how public participation processes can support children to experience their participation rights and empower them as active agents of change in their communities and beyond.  The research indicates that when the proper supports are in place, children and young people can make significant contributions to the shaping of environmental decision making and policy.  It also demonstrates that their participation encourages a sense of environmental responsibility and fosters collective action that persists over time and scale

The research demonstrates that children and young people who have experienced a citizens’ assembly first hand not only become environmental citizens and activists but go onto help others understand the real-world impact that participation can on their own personal journeys, on their families, schools and communities, and on policy, nationally and internationally. 

For more on the Assembly itself and a report on the impact it has had go to https://cyp-biodiversity.ie