Center for Global Affairs
Children and Youth in Conflict, Peacebuilding, and Development
Child soldiers, student revolutionaries, migrant workers and legions of
unemployed youth are but a few of the important roles that young people play in
national and international affairs. This course will consider a wide variety of ways in
which young people help to shape the future.
The course will begin with a discussion of international standards ¿ the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, other human rights treaties, humanitarian law
and the Millennium Development Goals. We also will discuss the youth bulges that
affect many countries, the graying of other societies, the disparities of gender and
cultural definitions of childhood and youth.
Next we will turn to the complex positions of young people in societies in conflict
¿ as fighters and casualties, as suicide bombers and drug runners, as perpetrators and
victims of sexual violence and human trafficking, and as demonstrators and militias
seeking to end or to sustain dictatorships. We will move on to the issues of peace-
building that directly involve youth: demobilization and reentry; education, training and
jobs for young women and men, and efforts to reconcile ethnic, religious or other groups
after conflict.
The course will then review the roles that young people can and do play in
developing their societies: through their openness to social and economic change, their
advancement in education and entrepreneurship, their adoption of better health
practices, their engagement in sports, arts and entertainment, and their efforts to
establish democracy.
The course assignments will ask students to develop ideas for addressing the
needs of young people and harnessing the possibilities they bring to global affairs.