UN Youth Australia Ltd. | |
Type: | Charity and Company limited by guarantee |
Founded Date: | 1970 |
Headquarters: | Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia |
Key People: | National President: Caleb Henley Board Chair: Jo Barry-Murphy |
Focus: | Youth empowerment International Relations United Nations |
Affiliations: | World Federation of United Nations Associations via United Nations Association of Australia |
Former Name: | United Nations Youth Association of Australia / United Nations Association of Australia Youth |
UN Youth Australia is a national youth-led organisation which seeks to educate and empower young Australians on global issues and foster an understanding of the work of the United Nations, human rights and International relations in young Australians.[1] The organisation is fully operated by volunteers who have left high school and are under the age of 25,[2] over 15,000 young people participate in UN Youth Australia’s programs, activities and events each year.
UN Youth Australia is affiliated with, but is not a division of or run by, the United Nations Association of Australia[3] which has a consultative status with ECOSOC as a member of the World Federation of United Nations Associations. UN Youth also works closely with The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade on the annual Australian Youth Representative to the United Nations program.[4]
UN Youth is a federated organisation overseen by the Board of Directors which appoint a National Executive, with divisions in each state and territory overseen by independent executives.[5] Each division is run independently and collaborate to organise national events and programs.
UN Youth Australia is run entirely by a team of over 1,000 volunteers aged under 25.
UN Youth Australia holds three annual national events: the UN Youth National Conference, the National Finals of the Evatt Competition, a UN Security Council Competition named after Dr H.V. Evatt, and the National Finals of the Voice Competition, a public speaking competition. Participants in these conferences are students from secondary schools across Australia. The conferences are held in Australian capital cities designated on a rotational system.[6]
National Conference is a week-long educational conference for students in year 9 to 12, held in a different capital city each year. Each State and Territory division of UN Youth Australia, UN Youth New Zealand and some international organisations send delegates to National Conference.
UN Youth Australia and its State and Territory divisions organises one of the largest high school tournaments in Australia: the National Evatt Competition which is a UN Security Council Model United Nations competition named after the distinguished Australian politician, diplomat and jurist Dr H.V. Evatt.
Voice is a public speaking competition for students in years 7 to 10. Student are asked to pitch a solution to a social, economic or political problem, and then answer impromptu questions from the judges.
In addition to domestic conferences, UN Youth Australia also operates six international tours.
Each year in January, a delegation of secondary school students tours the United States, meeting US and UN officials in Washington, D.C. and New York.
Also in January, UN Youth Australia sends a delegation of 16 secondary school students to visit the United Nations Office in Vienna as part of a European tour focusing on international relations, modern history, and organisations in Europe relevant to global politics.
In July UN Youth Australia runs the Pacific Project which, in partnership with Destination Dreaming, arranges for secondary school students to visit development projects, meet diplomats, see NGO operations first hand, and have a chance to experience life in East Timor.
Also in July, the organisation sends a delegation of secondary school students on the Aotearoa Leadership Tour which promotes interculturalism and engagement between indigenous and non-indigenous young Australians through a tour of New Zealand focusing on Māori culture and Maori-Pākehā relations, organised in close collaboration with UN Youth New Zealand.
In 2015, UN Youth Australia began the Middle East Experience program, in which secondary school delegates tour 2 countries in the region.
In 2019, UN Youth Australia launched the Emerging Leaders Program, in which 16 secondary students from all over Australia tour Japan, South Korea and China.
Divisions of UN Youth Australia also coordinate events in their State or Territory, such as annual State Conferences and divisional rounds of the Evatt Competition, Voice Competition, educative school visits and speakers forums.
Each year since 1999, UN Youth Australia works with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade to select and support a Youth Representative to the United Nations General Assembly. The Youth Representative holds an extensive, nationwide consultation tour to engage with and discover the issues that are most important to young Australians, and travels to New York as an accredited member of the Australian Mission to represent Australian youth at the United Nations.
Name | Year | UNGA Statement | |
Andrew Hudson | 1999 | ||
Carrie McDougall | 2000 | ||
Kirsten Hagon | 2001 | [7] | |
Rebecca Jenkin | 2002 | ||
Adam Smith | 2003 | [8] | |
Cat Thao Nguyen | 2004 | ||
Ben Whitehouse | 2005 | ||
Elise Klein | 2006 | [9] | |
Ben Groom | 2007 | [10] | |
Elizabeth Shaw and Melanie Poole | 2008 | [11] | |
Chris Varney | 2009 | [12] | |
Samah Hadid | 2010 | [13] | |
Benson Saulo | 2011 | [14] [15] | |
Dan Ryan | 2012 | [16] | |
Adam Pulford | 2013 | [17] | |
Laura John | 2014 | [18] | |
Shea Spierings | 2015 | [19] | |
Chris Eigeland | 2016 | [20] | |
Paige Burton | 2017 | [21] | |
Amos Washington | 2018 | [22] | |
Kareem El-Ansary | 2019 | ||
Lucy Stronach | 2020/21 | ||
Angelica Ojinnaka | 2022 | ||
Imogen Kane | 2023 | ||
Gavin Choong | 2024 |