Young, Black, and Powerful: Black Youth as Agents of Change

The Bounce Black Team

At the 5th session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, one message came through clearly: young people of African descent are not just future leaders, they are rights-holders and changemakers now.

This framing matters.

Because too often, Black youth are spoken about in terms of deficits: barriers in education, limited access to opportunity, overexposure to systems of punishment, and underrepresentation in decision-making spaces.

These things are real, and they are systemic.

But they are not the full story.

Beyond Barriers: Recognising Agency

The Forum highlighted what many of us already know through lived experience:

Young people of African descent are actively shaping change in their communities, online, in workplaces, and across global movements.

They are:

  • Organising and mobilising
  • Creating new economic pathways
  • Challenging harmful narratives
  • Building communities of care and resistance

Yet, their ability to do so is often constrained by the very systems they are trying to transform.

To call young people “changemakers” without addressing structural inequality is incomplete. To address inequality without recognising agency is also incomplete.

Both must exist together.

Where Bounce Black Stands

At Bounce Black, this intersection is where we work.

Our programmes are grounded in a simple but powerful belief:

Black young people deserve not just access, but the tools, support, and environment to thrive.

Through initiatives like the Roots: Career Foundations Programme, we support Black students and early career professionals to:

  • Navigate complex and often exclusionary systems
  • Build confidence and clarity in their career pathways
  • Develop skills that translate into real opportunities
  • Prioritise wellbeing in the face of racialised experiences

This is more than standard professional development. It is structural intervention at the level of lived experience.

From Global Dialogue to Local Impact

We were also featured in a Forum side event titled Tomorrow’s Trailblazers: Youth Leadership Across the UK’s African Diaspora hosted by our friends at the Young Africa Centre.

The virtual event showcased YAC, its collaborators and the collective impact of youth-led organisations in London, UK.

Our contribution focused on:

  • The realities Black students and professionals face in education and employment
  • The impact of racial trauma on confidence, performance, and progression
  • The importance of holistic, trauma informed support
  • The need to move beyond “access” towards sustainable thriving

We shared how community-led, culturally responsive programmes can:

  • Bridge the gap between policy and lived experience
  • Equip young people with both practical tools and internal resilience
  • Create spaces where growth, healing, and ambition can coexist

The response reinforced something important, namely that this work is needed, and it resonates globally.

What Needs to Happen Next

If young people of African descent are to be truly recognised as rights-holders and changemakers, then:

1. Systems must change
Education, employment, and justice systems must move beyond performative inclusion towards structural transformation.

2. Investment must follow
Community-led organisations doing this work need sustained funding and support. (If you’re feeling generous, consider donating to our crowdfunder here)

3. Young people must be meaningfully included
Not as tokens, but as partners in shaping policy and decision making.

4. Wellbeing must be prioritised
Thriving is not just economic; it is emotional, psychological, and social.

From Recognition to Reality

The conversations at the Forum are important. They set the tone. They shape global priorities.

But the real test is what happens next.

At Bounce Black, we remain committed to ensuring that these global commitments translate into something tangible.

In classrooms, workplaces, and our everyday lives.

Because Black young people are already changemakers.

The question is whether the world will meet them with the support, recognition, and structural change they deserve.

At this point, we’re done asking.

We’re demanding it and building for ourselves.

#AfricanDiaspora #BlackAtWork #BlackExcellence #BlackProfessionals #blackStudents #bounceBlack #health #history #mentalHealth #news #NikkiAdebiyi #politics #TheAfricaCentre #UN #UNPermanentForumOnPeopleOfAfricanDescent #UnitedNations #YoungAfricaCentre

Police Say No Foul Play After Black Mississippi Student Found Hanging From Tree

But legislators and community members said they are still seeking answers surrounding Demartravion “Trey” Reed’s death.

https://murica.website/2025/09/police-say-no-foul-play-after-black-mississippi-student-found-hanging-from-tree/

Police Say No Foul Play After Black Mississippi Student Found Hanging From Tree – The USA Potato

Black students and colleges across US targeted with racist threats day after Charlie Kirk killing

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/12/black-students-colleges-racist-threats

At least seven historically Black colleges and universities went on lockdown on Thursday, including Alabama State University, Virginia State University, Hampton University in Virginia, Spelman College, Southern University and A&M College, Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College and Bethune-Cookman University.

#WhiteSupremacists #Target #BlackStudents #CharlieKirk

Black students and colleges across US targeted with racist threats day after Charlie Kirk killing

FBI said threats were ‘hoax calls’, although universities took measures to prevent incidents on campuses

The Guardian

In their predominantly white high school in #Halifax , a group of #BlackStudents face daily reminders of #racism ,ranging from abuse (racist graffiti on washroom walls), to #exclusion (the omission of #BlackHistory from textbooks). They work to establish a #CulturalAwareness #YouthGroup , a vehicle for building pride and self-esteem through #educational and #cultural programs. With help from mentors, they discover the richness of their heritage and learn some of the ways they can begin to effect change.

https://www.nfb.ca/film/speak_it_from_heart_of_black_nova_scotia/

#BlackCanadians #NovaScotia #Canadians #RacistHistory #BlackPride #BlackHeritage #BlackYouths #CulturalDiversity #BlacksInCanada #Maritimes #CanadianHistory #AntiRacism #Canada #Documentary

Speak It! From the Heart of Black Nova Scotia

National Film Board of Canada

#RESIST! #NAACP Sues #DepartmentOfEducation Over #DEI Rollbacks: Here's What To Know

The nation's oldest #CivilRights group says the Trump administration’s rollback of diversity and inclusion programs is unconstitutional and disproportionately harms #BlackStudents.

April 19, 2025

"The NAACP is suing the U.S. Department of Education over recent efforts to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs in schools. In a federal complaint filed in Washington, D.C., the organization alleges that the Department of Education’s recent directives are unconstitutional and discriminatory—particularly for Black students.

"The complaint faults the administration for targeting programs that offer '#truthful, #inclusive curricula,' as well as policies that expand access to selective educational opportunities for #BlackAmericans and foster belonging while addressing #racism in schools.

"The NAACP argues that the Department’s recent actions 'advance a misinterpretation' of federal civil rights laws and Supreme Court precedent—actions that, according to the group, violate its members’ rights to equal protection and to be free from viewpoint discrimination under the #USConstitution.

"NAACP President Derrick Johnson criticized the move, stating that the administration is 'effectively sanctioning' the very discrimination that U.S. civil rights laws were designed to prevent

" 'The Department of Education, tasked with a responsibility to protect the civil rights of all children, has instead claimed #SystemicRacism doesn’t exist — effectively sanctioning the very discrimination that our civil rights laws were designed to prevent while children of color consistently attend #segregated, chronically underfunded schools where they receive less educational opportunities and more discipline,' said Johnson."

Read more:
https://www.essence.com/news/naacp-sues-department-of-education-over-dei/?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

#BlackLivesMatter #USPol #Resistance #TrumpIsARacist #CharacteristicsOfFascism

NAACP Sues Department Of Education Over DEI Rollbacks: Here’s What To Know

The nation's oldest civil rights group says the Trump administration’s rollback of diversity and inclusion programs is unconstitutional and disproportionately harms Black students.

Essence

Chicago releases its Black Student Success Plan amid backlash against race-based initiatives

Read the article here:
https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2025/02/20/cps-releases-black-student-success-plan/

#Education #BlackStudents #BlackStudentSuccess

Chicago releases its Black Student Success Plan amid backlash against race-based initiatives

Chicago district officials are celebrating the release of their plan to boost outcomes for Black students this week. But it’s colliding with intense backlash against diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives from the Trump administration and advocacy groups.

Chalkbeat

The Orangeburg Massacre was a shooting of student protesters on February 8, 1968, on the campus of

#blackmen #blackeducation #blackpeople #blackamerican #police #whitepeople #whitedevil #blacktivists #blackstudents #blackmastodon #blackhistory

(1/110)

Frank W. Hale, Jr. Black Cultural Center celebrates 35th anniversary

October marks the 35th anniversary of the Frank W. Hale, Jr. Black Cultural Center — located at 154 W. 12th Ave. and colloquially known as “Hale Hall” among many Ohio State students.  Since the center’s establishment Oct. 11, 1989, it has become a home away from home for Ohio State’s Black community, supporting students academically, […]

The Lantern
What Makes a True Leader?

YouTube

Are we failing Black students? Mental health of Black students at universities in the UK https://www.nationalelfservice.net/?p=168134

In her debut blog, Kashish Janiani Tulsiyani considers a review exploring the mental health experiences of Black students in UK universities.

#StudentMentalHealth #BlackMentalHealth #BlackStudents #University #Education #Stigma #Discrimination #Racism #StudentMentalHealthServices #Equity

Are we failing Black students? Mental health of Black students at universities in the UK

In her debut blog, Kashish Janiani Tulsiyani considers a review exploring mental health experiences of Black students in UK universities.

National Elf Service