USAID South Sudan Youth Empowerment Activity

USAID South Sudan Youth Empowerment Activity

Project Director:

Funded by:

U.S. Agency for International Development

Partners:

Nile Hope, Mobile Humanitarian Agency, Women’s Advancement Organization

Services:

Implementation

Region:

Africa

Duration:

2022-2026

Challenge

South Sudan is the youngest country in the world, in terms of its independence and its population, of which an estimated 74% are under 30 years old. Protracted crises, including conflict, flooding, and severe drought, have forcibly displaced millions of people, impeded social service delivery, and weakened community cohesion. Youth continue to suffer from limited access to education and livelihoods opportunities.

The EDC-implemented USAID Youth Empowerment Activity aims to improve access to functional skills so that youth can lead healthier lives, generate an income, and contribute to the social cohesion of their communities. To support this, the activity will model leadership and peer mentorship that strengthens positive youth development and youth-responsive service supports.

Key Activities

The USAID Youth Empowerment Activity is implementing the following activities:

  • Strengthening the capacity of national and local youth-led and youth-serving organizations to support greater youth-responsive services at state, county, payam, and boma levels
  • Establishing a Youth Corps Service Model, led by 500 youth leaders who support their peers in developing functional literacy, numeracy, and soft and life skills, thereby promoting social cohesion and reinforcing mentorship within and across communities
  • Building stakeholder engagement that strengthens enabling environments, reinforces local ownership, and ensures sustainability of best practices
  • Ensuring all interventions create supportive and effective environments that help youth reach their full potential

Our Impact

  • 25,000 youth access learning, soft, and life skills development.
  • 7,850 youth access entrepreneurial, employment, vocational, and work-based learning opportunities.
  • 17,500 youth receive technical support to improve agro-pastoral practices.
  • 23,100 youth participate in civic engagement and social cohesion activities.