Youth Talks Youth Talks is today the largest youth consultation ever conducted, with more than 45,000 participants from 212 different countries and territories, and nearly a million ideas shared. The endeavor required courage and a great deal of work on the part of all the stakeholders who contributed, in one way or another, to the project’s success. The Youth Talks mission: to transcend traditional borders and give the youth worldwide a special place to express themselves and make their voices heard Read more An Unprecedented Initiative Read more Youth Talks gives the younger generations the right to speak freely. Youth Talks provides a service of public interest that benefits the whole of every society, and its mission is to make the voices of the youth echo out around the world, thereby ensuring that they are both heard and taken into account by the organizations and decision-makers that shape our societies. Youth Talks, therefore, gives the youth a place where they can express themselves, and tell the rest of the world what they really care about, without being confined inside existing models or a single way of thinking. The questions they are asked on the platform are open-ended questions, with no predetermined answers to choose from and no preexisting paradigms—which might already be outmoded—to confine them. Moreover, there are many different ways to take part (written contributions, voice recordings or image uploads), and this too fosters diversity and inclusion. But Youth Talks has another mission too: to process what these communities of youth say in such a way as to enable this valuable information to be fully incorporated into actions undertaken by the various stakeholders in our societies who are working to bring about a more sustainable future. Youth Talks, therefore, uses cutting-edge artificial intelligence tools to digest this information and make it comprehensible to those stakeholders who are in a position to meet the needs and demands of the youth. This is why Youth Talks produces a range of different deliverables that are adapted to suit the language and realities of these various stakeholders, be they educational institutions, youth organizations, governments, businesses, media or the general public.This report is one of those deliverables!