What can youth do to fight corruption, organized crime and other threats that are impacting our world? How can we make the world a trusted, safe and inclusive place? How is rule of law influencing your life? What recommendations do you have for a sustainable and peaceful future?
The United Nations wants to hear from you about your experiences, hopes and ideas about the linkages between education and the rule of law, and how youth can take action to strengthen and promote the rule of law. Successful proposal submitters will have the opportunity to present their ideas in Vienna to the participants of the Education for Justice (E4J) conference.
Last weekend, 50 undergraduate students from ten Nigerian universities stayed up through Friday night for an entirely different reason: selected from over 400 applicants, they were planning, designing, and coding in the most recent UNODC-supported Hackathon for Justice, trying to come up with technological ways to make the world a safer place.
Following the success of its last hackathon, hosted by Silicon Valley's famed security firm Symantec, UNODC's Global Programme for the Implementation of the Doha Declaration has again teamed up with Africa Teen Geeks and, for the first time, with the world's most popular social media platform, Facebook; together, they continued engaging with young people to develop technology-based solutions to global challenges, specifically those affecting the rule of law.