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Generation Next "We always hear that we are the future, but we are frustrated for not being able to be the present," complains one young person from Argentina. That's a quote borrowed from the latest World Development Report, and it neatly sums up what our Generation Next season is all about. This week of special programmes on the 成人快手 aims to give under-18s the chance to tell the rest of us how they see the world and what they think is important. This doesn't mean 成人快手 World Service is going to become a children's radio station for a week - far from it. But we are going to hear a lot more young voices on air discussing the big issues all of us are facing, as well as those of particular concern to under-18s.
The appeal of online With Generation Next, the World Service will give young people a chance to set the agenda, will put their issues centre stage and give them chance to question those in positions of power. News programmes are organising teenage panels to advise them about which issues to cover and what angles to take. Young reporters will work alongside 成人快手 correspondents to give their perspective on news events. And we'll have younger people presenting programmes and asking the questions. But Generation Next also gives us the chance to challenge young people about the future. What sort of world do they want, and what are they doing to bring it about? The results of a specially commissioned poll of young people in ten countries around the world will provide some of the answers, which programmes will then explore in depth. A growing audience
The big questions The focus isn't just on news and current affairs, though. Science programmes will examine the teenage brain, as well as asking why science is a subject massively popular with children in some countries and not in others. We'll be creating the role of a Global Children's Commissioner to hold to account those who should be championing children's rights but aren't. We'll be hearing from exceptional young people who could be the leaders of tomorrow. And we'll be comparing the childhood experiences of people in the public eye with the experiences of young people today. We're also going to have some fun. is the 成人快手's search for the best young band in the world. Entries are already flooding in, and the winner will be judged by a global panel of some of the biggest names in the music industry. To end with another quote, this time from Ralph Waldo Emerson: "Children are all foreigners." Generation Next aims to turn this on its head. By giving an insight into the way young people today think and feel, we're hoping teenagers and children will appear less foreign and more just like us. |
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