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March 10, 2023

Workshop Series Highlights Urgency and Hope on Global Children’s Issues

Music filled the Intercultural Center Auditorium on March 1 as recording artist and former child soldier from South Sudan Emmanuel Jal wove together songs and stories of adversity and resilience. Performing as part of the Children in a World of Challenges Workshop Series, Jal captured the spirit of this week-long event series designed to facilitate dialogue around pressing issues affecting children globally.

Emmanuel Jal leads the crowd in dance during "Songs and Stories of Adversity and Resilience"
Emmanuel Jal leads the crowd in dance during "Songs and Stories of Adversity and Resilience"

From February 26 through March 2, 2023, the event series brought more than 200 people to campus throughout the week to engage with outstanding leaders like Jal who are supporting children at risk. Co-hosted by the Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues and campus partners, the 12-part event series explored a variety of issues – such as the healing power of play, the war in Ukraine, the impact of climate change on children, working with young migrants, and children with disabilities

Gillian Huebner, the collaborative’s executive director, emphasized the critical importance of centering children in our multifaceted responses to innumerable global challenges.

“We can’t effectively address any of the global crises of our time if we are not grappling with how young people are impacted. They bear the brunt of these difficulties in their daily lives and will inevitably inherit all the problem-solving these challenges require.”

Participants sit in a circle during Ifrah Mansour and Emma Jaster's workshop "Healing with Humor"
Participants sit in a circle during Ifrah Mansour and Emma Jaster's workshop "Healing with Humor"

The event series was co-sponsored by the Walsh School of Foreign Service; Center for Child and Human Development; Center for Social Justice Research, Teaching and Service; Global Human Development Program; Global Health Institute; and Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics at Georgetown University.

Georgetown University Vice President for Global Engagement Thomas Banchoff highlighted the importance of building a cross-campus network through programs like this.

“The wide range of university programs, departments, and units reflects not only the diversity of issues impacting children today but also the collaborative, interdisciplinary approach needed to address these issues.”

With 90% of the world’s child and youth population living in less developed countries and disproportionately affected by poverty, poor health, unemployment, violence, and exclusion, efforts to support children at risk can seem overwhelming. However, reflecting on the week-long series of events, Huebner commented that the theme of young people’s resilience continuously stood out.

“This workshop series demonstrated how the conversations come alive in a new way when we put children at the center – there is both more urgency and more hope.”

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