Tomorrow’s leaders: celebrating international youth day

Tomorrow’s leaders are all around us. They live in the communities we serve. They work in the organisations we support. They fight for the rights we all hold dear. So to commemorate this year’s international youth day we reached out to young leaders across the globe.

They spoke with us about their experiences advocating for tenure rights, gender inclusiveness and climate action. They even shared a few powerful messages for today’s leaders. Here is a glimpse of what the next generation had to say about protecting communal land rights and tackling global challenges.

“I’m a fighter, a feminist and a defender of human rights, in particular the rights of communities that are victims of land injustice, with a focus on women and young people.”

“Community is not just about people; it’s about the land that has shaped us. Our way of life is threatened as our elders pass and forests fall. Our message remains: Land is not a commodity but a living entity. Land is alive just as we are alive.” 

“I grew up in the forest and I’ve learned to secure and protect it because it’s crucial for our daily survival. We face a lot of difficulties with outsiders. We’ve remained very vigilant – me, my wife, and a few of my friends – and continue to monitor activities in the forest to make sure that there are no longer any loggers destroying our forest.”

“It is said that women and men are like the two wheels of a cart. Just as a cart cannot move at its full speed if one wheel is weak, the progress is hindered when both men and women are not active. Similarly, in our households and society, only when both women and men are actively involved, the family and society can move forward.”

“By getting involved in the community and being part of it, you play an important role in defending the rights of our territories, since our greatest wealth is our territories, and our greatest right is to fight for it.”

“Let’s build a collective movement and be ready to make a real contribution to the struggle for land rights and be at the forefront for change and prosperity in people’s organisations!” 

Leaders must “do everything possible to guarantee that the rights of Indigenous Pygmies are respected, advocate for the reduction of social inequalities that disadvantage the Pygmy people and urge authorities to build basic socio-economic infrastructures (schools, hospitals, roads) in our communities.”

“My message to world leaders is to take a closer look at this issue of the free Babaçu law, which needs to be much more visible and much more widespread. The law … still suffers from a lot of owners who threaten women. This is a crime.”

Articles

25 July 2025

Brazil

From the Territories, Indigenous, Afrodescendant, and Traditional Communities Set the Climate Agenda—Will the World Listen?

As COP30 approaches, Indigenous Peoples, Afrodescendant Peoples, and Traditional Communities—including Babassu Coconut Breakers (quebradeiras de coco babaçu)—are setting the terms for climate justice. Through organised Pre-COP gatherings, public communiqués, and formal declarations delivered directly to President Lula, these frontline communities are advancing a bold agenda to shape Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).

12 June 2025

Colombia

Yuluka Protecting the Heart of the World : dialogue a key tool for the protection and recuperation of the Sierra Nevada

The Amazon Conservation Team Colombia (ACT), the National Commission for Indigenous Territories (CNTI), and Tenure Facility teams shared spaces of dialogue with the Kogui, Arhuaco, and Wiwa peoples in the heart of the Sierra Nevada. These meetings led to meaningful reflections and important lessons about how to care for and protect a deeply sacred territory.

22 May 2025

Liberia

CLDMCs at the Heart of Liberia’s Evolving Land Governance

Imagine two clans, Nimba County’s Gbosua and Zorgowee, locked in a long-standing dispute over their shared boundaries. The tension between them could have easily spiraled into deeper conflict, lasting resentment, or even violence. But Community Land Development and Management Committees (CLDMCs) stepped in, bringing a different kind of approach.
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