List of Resources: Youth Organizing

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  • Empowers children in North America to take action to improve the lives of fellow children overseas.
  • FCYO is a US collaborative that was founded to respond to two immediate needs in the field of youth organizing:

    • The need for commitment, support and resources for long-term stability, sustainability and wider impact of youth organizing groups given their growth, maturation and challenges.
    • The need for sustained, expanded support and funding for youth organizing beyond philanthropic trends.

    More info at www.fcyo.org

  • A tool to support the growth of a powerful and connected progressive youth movement in the United States. It's a dynamic directory of youth organizations working for justice across all 50 states.

  • The US based FreeChild Project provides tools and training to young people and adults that engage children and youth in social change.

  • Based in Providence, R.I., What Kids Can Do (WKCD) is a national nonprofit founded in January 2001 by an educator and journalist with more than 40 years' combined experience supporting adolescent learning in and out of school. Together, they felt an urgent need to promote perceptions of young people as valued resources, not problems, and to advocate for learning that engages students as knowledge creators and not simply test takers. Just as urgent, they believed, was the need to bring youth voices to policy debates about school, society, and world affairs. Using the Internet, print, and broadcast media, WKCD presses before the broadest audience possible a dual message: the power of what young people can accomplish when given the opportunities and supports they need and what they can contribute when we take their voices and ideas seriously. The youth who concern WKCD most are those marginalized by poverty, race, and language. On its website, WKCD presents young people's lives, learning, and work, and their partnerships with adults both in and out of school. Its community of readers stretches from youth organizers in some of the U.S.’s toughest urban areas to policy makers at the national level. WKCD believes that a good story well told crosses geographies, generations, class and race, and position. WKCD is a grant maker, too, collaborating with youth on multimedia, curricula, and research that expand current views of what constitutes challenging learning and achievement. Starting in 2006, WKCD began working with youth worldwide. WKCD has become an international leader in bringing the promise of young people to the attention of the adults whose encouragement can make all the difference.
  • An independent news and culture web magazine that generates and amplifies daily content by young people from diverse backgrounds in the United States.


  • Another US based organization that builds communities where young people and their adult allies come together to create positive social change. YLI designs and implements community-based programs that provide youth with leadership skills in the areas of drug and alcohol abuse prevention, philanthropy, and civic engagement.

  • YN is a social networking site for people under the age of 27 who like to connect based on deeper interests than Paris Hilton's wardrobe and want to get engaged within a cause.
     
  • Grassroots Youth Collaborative on Youth Led Organizing in the City of Toronto