Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa water, Sanitation Mar- Apr 2015 Vol.10 No.2 | Page 24

Development The youth holds the future of development By Fernando Frutuoso de Melo A young woman with an EU flag face paint. A Eurobarometer report reveals that young people in the bloc believe that helping developing countries is important. Photo by: European Union 2014 - European Parliament / CC BY-NC-ND W hat Irish statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke wrote in the 18th century still holds true for young men and women and children across the world today. “Tell me what are the prevailing sentiments that occupy the minds of your young men, and I will tell you what is to be the character of the next generation.” Their perception of the world around them and their place in it will determine the extent to which they get involved in activities aimed at change and progress, and how successful their efforts can be. In developing countries, the preoccupations of young people concern many of their basic needs and those of their parents, their families and immediate communities — food security, access to health care, water and energy supplies, freedom from warfare and instability, the right to education and schooling, and future employment prospects. Some of these concerns are shared, to varying degrees, by young people in developed countries, although their attention may be less focused on acute day-to-day personal 24 Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • March - April 2015 needs. I was encouraged by the findings of the European Commission’s recent special Eurobarometer report on citizens’ views on development, cooperation and aid. These showed that young people in the European Union between the ages of 15 and 24 are more likely than their elders to think it is important to help people in developing countries, more likely to think the EU should increase development aid beyond promised levels, and more optimistic about the impact that individual actions can have in helping developing countries. Listening to the views, hopes — and fears — of young people is essential in defining the development agenda for the years and decades to come. 2015 is the European Year for Development, with three key objectives — informing EU citizens about development cooperation and its results; fostering direct involvement, critical thinking and active interest; and raising awareness of the benefits of development cooperation. Clearly, young people in the EU are a prime focus of the activities that are being undertaken by the European Commission and the member states to ensure that these aims are fulfilled. Their