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Future Policy Award 2014: Duluth Model is world’s best policy / Exemplary laws from Burkina Faso and Austria win Silver / Vision Award goes to Istanbul Convention
 
Hamburg/Geneva/New York – 14 October 2014The “Coordinated Community Response to Domestic Violence” by the City of Duluth in the US State of Minnesota is the winner of the 2014 Future Policy Award for Ending Violence against Women and Girls. It beat 24 other nominated policies to the prize. The Gold Award is to be presented to Minnesota Representative Michael Paymar from the Minnesota House of Representatives today at a ceremony in Geneva by the World Future Council, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) and UN Women.
 
The “Duluth Model” won the Gold Award for effectively prioritizing the safety and autonomy of survivors while holding perpetrators to account through a coordinated response involving the whole community. This approach to implementing legislation on violence against women has since inspired violence protection laws and policies in other countries such as Austria, Germany, UK, Romania, and Australia.
 
On learning about the Gold prize for the pioneering “Duluth Model”, which he helped initiate with the late Dr. Ellen Pence in the early 1980s, Representative Paymar said: “This is a great honor. We never imagined the global impact that the Duluth Model would have, but more importantly how many lives would be saved”.

Jakob von Uexkull, Founder and Chair of the World Future Council, said: ““This prize celebrates policies that help us to do the right thing by creating the right rules. We need laws which support a just world and protect the rights of future generations.”  
 
Silver awards were granted to two other policies. Burkina Faso’s Silver Award, to be collected by First Lady Chantal Compaoré, went to its Law Prohibiting Female Genital Mutilation, adopted in 1996. Since the adoption of the law and the implementation of a National Action Plan, surveys confirm a significant decrease in the proportion of younger women who have undergone the harmful practice. About 12 per cent of girls under-14 are cut now compared to 25 per cent in 2006.
 
Austria received the prize for its law granting psychosocial and legal court assistance for victims of violence during criminal and civil procedure.  It effectively safeguards the rights of victims of violence and empowers them during court proceedings. This was a seminal change to the country’s Criminal and Civil Procedure Act.
 
“Comprehensive laws are a critical first step. Implementing them effectively is just as crucial. These winners show what can be achieved when both aspects are combined. IPU will continue to support parliaments’ efforts to make ending violence against women a reality,” said IPU Secretary General Martin Chungong.
 
The Council of Europe’s “Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence”, also known as the Istanbul Convention, which came into force in August of this year, won the World Future Council’s first ever “Vision Award” for a particularly promising policy.

Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, UN Women Executive Director, concluded: “The policies awarded represent truly inspirational models for others. Importantly, the emphasis has also been on rigorous implementation. Political will and sufficient resources are critical for promising legislation to have a real impact on reducing violence against women.”         
 
The Future Policy Award is the only award which honours policies rather than people on an international level. Honorable Mentions were bestowed on Spain’s Organic Act 1/2004 on Integrated Protection Measures against Gender Violence and, in the vision category, on Bolivia’s Law against Political Harassment and Violence against Women from 2012.
 
The World Future Council will now work to globally raise awareness of the winning model policies and assist policy-makers to develop and implement similar initiatives. On 25 November 2014, the World Future Council, together with its partners UN Women and IPU, will host an interactive panel discussion on the preconditions of successful policy-making and implementation at UN Headquarters in New York. Policy-makers from Minnesota, Austria, Burkina Faso and the Council of Europe will participate. 25 November is the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.
 
More information on the award and the winning policies can be found in our brochure, which can be downloaded in EnglishFrench and Spanish.

 


Notes to Editors

Future Policy Award 

The Future Policy Award is designed to alert policymakers and the public to the importance of best practice in lawmaking and highlight outstanding examples of regulatory vision. The Award draws attention to existing sustainable policies and demonstrates that when political will is asserted, positive change can happen. Celebrating visionary policies raises public awareness, encourages rapid learning and speeds up policy action towards just, sustainable and peaceful societies. For more information, seewww.worldfuturecouncil.org/future_policy_award.html  

Previous Future Policy Award Topics:  
  
2013: Disarmament      
2012: Oceans and Coasts        
2011: Forests   
2010: Biodiversity         
2009: Food Security

World Future Council 

The World Future Council consists of 50 eminent global change-makers from governments, parliaments, civil society, academia, the arts and business. We work to pass on a healthy planet and just societies to our children and grandchildren with a focus on identifying and spreading effective, future-just policy solutions. The World Future Council was launched in 2007 by Jakob von Uexkull, Founder of the 'Alternative Nobel Prize'. It operates as an independent foundation under German law and finances its activities from donations. Find out more at: http://www.worldfuturecouncil.org

Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU)

As the global organization of national parliaments, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) works to establish democracy, peace and cooperation among peoples by uniting members to drive positive change. Its focus on gender equality and in particular, women’s political participation, addresses a key component of democracy. Since 2008, IPU has also been working with parliaments to end violence against women through advocacy and awareness-raising activities and the introduction and implementation of legislation to tackle the issue. Find out more at: http://www.ipu.org

United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women)
 
UN Women is the UN organization dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women. A global champion for women and girls, UN Women was established to accelerate progress on meeting their needs worldwide. UN Women supports UN Member States as they set global standards for achieving gender equality, and works with governments and civil society to design laws, policies, programmes and services needed to implement these standards. It stands behind women’s equal participation in all aspects of life, focusing on five priority areas: increasing women’s leadership and participation; ending violence against women; engaging women in all aspects of peace and security processes; enhancing women’s economic empowerment; and making gender equality central to national development planning and budgeting. UN Women also coordinates and promotes the UN system’s work in advancing gender equality. Find out more at: http://www.unwomen.org/
 
Media Contacts

World Future Council
Anne Reis
Media & Communications Manager
Tel: +49 40 30 70 914-16 (Hamburg, Germany)
Mobile: +49 174 193 3145
anne.reis@worldfuturecouncil.org

IPU                                    
Jemini Pandya
Director of Communications
Tel: + 41 22 919 4158 (Geneva, Switzerland)
jep@ipu.org

UN Women    
Oisika Chakrabarti
Senior Communications & Media Specialist
Tel: +1 646 781 4522 (New York, USA)
oisika.chakrabarti@unwomen.org


 

 

 

The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) is the global organization of national parliaments. It works to safeguard peace and drives positive democratic change through political dialogue and concrete action.

 

 

 

 
 

 

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Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org

Geneva, 10 October 2014
 
A benchmark IPU analysis on youth representation in politics reveals that low youth representation in parliament remains a global challenge for democracy despite some encouraging trends and emerging best practices to engage young people in the work of national parliaments.
 
The analysis, which will be presented at the First IPU Global Conference of Young MPs taking place on 10-11 October in Geneva, maps the presence of young people in parliaments and provides the first global ranking of countries in terms of the percentage of MPs under the ages of 45, 40 and 30.
 
Taking stock of the current situation, the study will serve as the starting point for debate for some 165 MPs from 60 countries attending the Conference.
 
Based on available data from nearly 100 parliamentary chambers (72 Lower Houses and 26 Upper Houses), the analysis shows that a large majority of MPs (39 per cent) are between 51 and 60 years of age. The next largest age group is 41-50 (22.6 per cent), followed by the 61-70 (20.5 per cent) age bracket.
 
MPs under 30 account for 1.75 per cent, with only one country, Norway, exceeding the 10 per cent barrier with 10.1 per cent.
 
The Rules of IPU´s Forum of Young Parliamentarians consider MPs under age 45 as young MPs. The study finds that their presence in parliament varies enormously across countries from more than 60 per cent in the Netherlands to nil in Micronesia, Tuvalu and Uruguay (Senate).
 
The study points to the widespread discrepancy between minimum ages for voting and being elected as one of the reasons why youth may be underrepresented in relation to their numbers in the population.
 
The minimum age required to run for office remains in many countries higher than the minimum age necessary to vote. Some countries have aligned both and others have lowered their voting or eligibility ages in recent years, but trends in terms of the latter have been relatively stable. More needs to be done.
 
Citizens can vote at 16 in countries such as Austria, Cuba, Indonesia and Nicaragua while they must wait to vote later in the Republic of Korea (19), Cameroon (20) and Malaysia (21).
 
In contrast, the age at which a person can stand as a candidate varies more substantially. Most chambers stipulate the age of 18 (42 chambers) but in many countries, citizens are not eligible to run for parliament until age 21 (18 chambers) or 25 (19 chambers).
 
The wait to run for parliament is longer for the Upper House, where the minimum age to be a candidate can be 35, as in Brazil, Burundi, Paraguay and the Philippines, or even 40, which is the case in Cameroon, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.
 
Regarding gender, the survey shows men outnumber women in every age group in the majority of chambers. Yet, the cohorts where women outnumber men tend to be the youngest age groups – 21 to 30 and 31 to 40.
 
In terms of legal provisions, different countries have devised a variety of strategies to elect more young people to parliament. In particular, youth quotas appear to be a measure that could directly contribute to the election of more young parliamentarians, following the example of electoral gender quotas that doubled the presence of women in national parliaments in the last 20 years.
 
Other measures include the creation of youth parliaments as platforms for raising awareness and a means to enhance active citizenship, and the establishment of parliamentary committees dealing with youth issues.
 
The study also underlines how in recent years young people´s disillusion with formal politics has grown in parallel with their increasing role as key players on the frontlines of mass movements for political and social change around the world.
 
However, the debate over whether young people are disengaged from formal politics has rarely led to concrete measures to promote the election and appointment of more young people to political positions, including within political parties. The focus has been mainly on consultative mechanisms such as youth councils and youth parliaments.
 
Young people between the ages of 15 and 25 account for one fifth of the world´s population today - yet their political representation remains far behind. This makes youth a politically excluded social group which should merit more than just a token presence in parliaments for reasons of justice and democratic legitimacy.
 
Funded by Worldwide Support for Development (WSD), IPU’s Global Conference of Young MPs is bringing together the largest ever gathering of young parliamentarians, youth leaders and international experts in a bid to promote full and active participation of young people in politics to build more representative democracies.
 
Join the discussion using Twitter: #YoungMPs
 
Picture editors: photos downloadable for free from the following link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/inter-parliamentary-union/collections
Broadcasters: interviews will be available on ISDN number +4122 791 93 48.
 

 

For further information, please contact: 

Jemini Pandya, tel: +41 22 919 41 58/+41 79 217 3374, email: jep@ipu.org or Fernando Puchol, tel: +41 22 919 4137, email: fp@ipu.org