Hanoi (VNA)⛦ - Two young Vietnamese, Vu Son Tung and Le Minh Anh, have surpassed over 100 candidates in the Asia-Pacific region to be selected for the United Nations programme “Youth Innovation for Human Mobility”.
The UNDP Human Mobility Team and Youth Co:Lab, an initiative co-led by the UNDP and Citi Foundation, are partnering with the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), the UN Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), the Asia Pacific Refugee Rights Network (APRRN), and Migrant Forum Asia (MFA) for the first Youth Innovation for Human Mobility initiative in the Asia-Pacific region. The initiative called for exciting business proposals or innovative ideas to improve the lives of migrants, displaced people and their host communities among the urban poor. It prioritised proposals and ideas that target to address a range of challenges experienced by the groups. These are generating jobs and incomes in ways that protect natural resources and avoid environmental damage; improving relations between migrants, displaced people, their host communities and local authorities; preventing or lessening the impact of disasters and climate change on the urban poor; and enhancing health and other essential services for the urban poor. The UN Development Programme (UNDP) announcement of the selection of suitable candidates for its initiative came after four months of processing 150 submissions from the region.According to the UNDP, 1 billion people, or about 1 in every 8 persons around the world, live in informal urban areas, where families across generations are often squeezed into tiny, makeshift dwellings without access to running water, adequate sanitation and other essential services. Many are unemployed or in precarious work situations that barely pay for their daily survival. Their communities typically experience weak governance and rule of law, and their voices are rarely considered in urban planning processes. The impact of disasters and climate change is increasingly worsening such challenges. Most people in informal urban areas live in the sprawling megacities of Asia, with internal and cross-border migrants, displaced people, youth and women often over-represented, contributing to their exclusion. The marginalization of migrants and displaced people is frequently compounded by factors related to immigration status or municipal registrations, access to information and social support networks, or discrimination and xenophobia. |
VNA