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Geneva Challenge
27 September 2024

Geneva Challenge 2024 Finalists – The Challenges of Youth Empowerment

222 teams composed of 853 graduate students, representing 94 different nationalities, registered to take part in the 11th edition of the Geneva Challenge. A total of 91 project entries were submitted by 362 students from teams hailing from all over the world.

The Geneva Challenge is an international competition launched by the Geneva Graduate Institute in 2014, thanks to the vision and generosity of Ambassador Jenö Staehelin and the patronage of the late Kofi Annan. This contest brings together graduate students from diverse disciplinary and contextual perspectives to provide innovative and pragmatic solutions to some of the world’s complex challenges. This year, students were asked to tackle the challenges of youth empowerment and we are excited to share with you the projects by the five finalist teams: 

Team from Africa: University of Cape Town

  • Mntase Cares – Mobile Clinics for Youth Empowerment: Teenage pregnancy in South Africa is a growing crisis, with rising prevalence rates across all nine provinces, contributing to severe health risks, interrupted education, financial hardship, and entrenched cycles of poverty. These challenges not only undermine individual futures but also perpetuate socio-economic inequality on a national scale. The “Mntase Cares” project provides a transformative solution aligned with Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3: Good Health and Well-being, tackling this urgent issue by delivering holistic reproductive health services directly to underserved youth. Through mobile clinics equipped with contraceptive options, reproductive health education, and mentorship for both girls and boys aged 10 to 24, the project empowers young people to make informed decisions about their futures. Targeting remote and underserved communities, these clinics break down barriers of stigma and limited healthcare access. By incorporating cutting-edge telehealth services and a GPT-based tool for on-demand information and support, the project ensures that youth are not only informed but connected to a larger network of care. By advancing SDG 5: Gender Equality and SDG 4: Quality Education, the project strives for sustainable change—reducing teenage pregnancy, improving educational outcomes, and unlocking economic opportunities. 

Team from Asia: Yonsei University and Seoul National University

  • DigiBridge: Empowering Youth through Specialised E-commerce Education to Bridge the Digital Literacy Gap and Accelerate Economic Development in Rural Areas – A Case Study on Cambodia: This project aims to address the critical issue of youth empowerment in the digital age. It centres on the persona of Dina, a young woman from Kratie Province, Cambodia, whose family business struggles to adapt to the digital economy due to a lack of digital literacy and resources. DigiBridge envisions creating a digitally inclusive society where every young person has the opportunity, skills, and access to participate fully in the digital economy. The project targets youth in rural areas, female youth, and youth engaged in the Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), aiming to reduce poverty, promote quality education, and foster sustainable economic growth. The program includes comprehensive digital literacy and skills training, specialised digital skills curriculum for e-commerce, marketing, and finance, and the establishment of support networks for youth like Dina. With the support of private sector investments, government grants, and international organisations, DigiBridge aims to create a scalable model that can be adapted to various contexts, ultimately empowering youth like Dina and driving economic development in rural areas worldwide.

Team from Europe: University of Cambridge

  • Project REACH: Improving Access to Education for Youth in IDP Camps: The Resilient Education for Advancing Camp Horizons (REACH) project is an initiative that aims to improve educational outcomes for youth in Internally Displaced Persons’ (IDP) camps. The project will provide the normalcy of learning to Nigerian youth displaced by conflict, natural disasters, and socioeconomic instability, ensuring that they can be successfully assimilated back into formal education. With a focus on the Junior Secondary level of Nigeria’s education system, the three-pronged approach of Project REACH involves developing and deploying solar-powered mobile learning units to IDP camps (‘Schools on Wheels’); identifying and training high-literacy youth in these camps (‘Training the Trainers’); and empowering them to educate their fellow youth of lower literacy levels (‘Peers to Peers’), all facilitated by an offline REACH app installed on bespoke mobile devices. Additionally, REACH will provide extensive support through periodic visits and feedback fora to guarantee the effectiveness of the learning process. Project REACH will be piloted across four IDP camps in North-Eastern Nigeria, with the support of key stakeholders across the public and private sectors and civil society. In the long term, Project REACH will establish a new paradigm for providing innovative educational solutions to IDP camps, while closing the pipeline of youth involvement in social vices and opening the pathway for youth-led social change.
       

Team from Latin America: Rosario National University, Torcuato Di Tella University, and the University of Tübingen

  • YOUTHXPORT: Young entrepreneurs in Latin America encounter substantial challenges, particularly in accessing international trade opportunities. They often struggle with limited financing, insufficient experience, weak networks, and bureaucratic obstacles that impede their growth and success. Additionally, these challenges are compounded by a regional context characterised by high youth unemployment, widespread informality, and unequal access to opportunities. To address these barriers and challenges, we propose the creation of "YouthXport," a free mobile application whose mission is to empower these young entrepreneurs and motivate them to export and import products to and from their countries of origin, seeking to solve problems related to international logistics and customs in each country. This application allows them to manage their operations from the comfort of their homes, ensuring 100% compliance and security in the supply chain, without the need for prior investment. In addition, we will provide advice and seek the collaboration of professionals, large companies and governments, generating alliances that support this cause. 

Team from North America and Oceania: Harvard University

  • BESI: Behavioral Education for IFA Supplementation Intervention: Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) disproportionately affects adolescent girls worldwide, threatening their future given its long-term health consequences on reproductive capability as well as productivity and overall well-being. Despite global efforts to combat anaemia through iron folic acid (IFA) supplementation, adherence remains a challenge due to various individual and environmental factors. The BESI project aims to address the challenge by promoting cross-generation empowerment among women. The project will pair adolescent girls and pregnant women through a mobile platform, allowing for more effective IFA supplementation uptake and health monitoring that both parties need. Additionally, BESI will integrate IFA consumption with oranges in schools to address barriers to IFA intake and leverage the school environment to influence positive behavioural changes. A one academic-semester project will be piloted in Indonesia, a country with one of the highest anaemia cases among reproductive-age women. The focus will be on students in the Low-Cost Private Schools (LCPS), as they are highly marginalised due to their socioeconomic disadvantage and the schools’ lack of public funding. 

The Award Ceremony for the 2024 Geneva Challenge will be held at the Geneva Graduate Institute on Tuesday 19 November at 18:30. We will have the honour of beginning  the ceremony with a keynote address by Memory Banda, a Malawian children’s and girl’s rights activist whose activism helped to raise Malawi’s minimum legal age for marriage to 18.

This year’s winning project will be awarded CHF 10,000; the two teams in second place will receive CHF 5,000 each and the two teams in third place, CHF 2,500 each. More details on all five projects and further information on this year’s Challenge can be found on our website. Follow us on our Instagram and LinkedIn pages to keep informed of this year’s ceremony and the launch of the Geneva Challenge 2025.