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    Josia Shigwedha

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    Josia Shigwedha

APO International

Youth Charter Responds to International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) $200M Community Investment Pledge with Global Community Campus Initiative

today9 July, 2025

Background

 

Youth Charter

Youth Charter

In the wake of the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) historic USD 200 million commitment to invest in communities following the Olympism365 Summit in Lausanne, the Youth Charter (www.YouthCharter.org) has issued a bold Call to Action and unveiled a global expansion plan for its proven Community Campus model. 

The initiative aims to establish 10 Community Campuses by 2030 across high-need urban and rural communities worldwide, leveraging sport, arts, culture, and digital engagement to address youth disaffection, violence, inequality, and lack of opportunity. 

“The IOC has recognised the power of sport as a global force for hope, humanity, and sustainable development,” said Professor Geoff Thompson MBE FRSA DL, Founder and Chair of the Youth Charter. “Our Community Campuses provide the infrastructure, programming, and purpose to turn that vision into real-world impact where it’s needed most.” 

A Model of Measurable Impact 

Over the past three decades, the Youth Charter has demonstrated that community-based sport development can improve educational attainment, reduce youth crime, and promote mental well-being. The Campus model provides: 

  • Safe, inclusive spaces for play, learning and support 
  • Youth-led programmes focused on leadership, volunteering, and enterprise 
  • Local delivery of Olympic values through “Mini-Olympics” and community festivals 
  • Alignment with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and Olympism365 agenda 

A Call for Global Partnership 

The Youth Charter is now calling on: 

  • The IOC and Olympic Movement stakeholders 
  • UN agencies and global sport-for-development networks 
  • National governments and philanthropic partners to co-invest in the implementation and scaling of these campuses as part of a global legacy framework that brings the Olympism365 Summit commitments to life. 

From Pledge to Practice 

The Youth Charter’s proposal includes a Global Knowledge Exchange Platform and the publication of a new Legacy Report, highlighting 30+ years of data, case studies, and testimonials. This initiative builds toward the 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games as a milestone of shared accountability and impact. 

“Together, we can empower a new generation of young people to thrive through the Olympic spirit,” added Professor Thompson. “Now is the time to act with purpose, partnership, and passion.” 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Youth Charter.

Youth Charter @ Social Media: 
LinkedIn: @ YouthCharter
Facebook: @ YouthCharter
Instagram: @ youthchartersdp
YouTube: @ YouthCharter
X: @ YOUTHCHARTER

Youth Charter #Hashtags: 
#InternationalOlympicCommittee 
#Olympism 
#Fight4theStreets 
#YoungLivesLost 
#Call2Action 
#LegacyOpportunity4All 
#SportDevelopmentPeace 
#Empowerthenextgeneration 
#CommonwealthSecretariat 
#UNSustainableDevelopmentGoals 

About Youth Charter:
The Youth Charter is a UK registered charity and UN accredited non-governmental organisation. Launched in 1993 as part of the Manchester 2000 Olympic Bid and the 2002 Commonwealth Games, the Youth Charter has Campaigned and Promoted the role and value of sport, art, culture and digital technology in the lives of disaffected young people from disadvantaged communities nationally and internationally. The Youth Charter has a proven track record in the creation and delivery of social and human development programmes with the overall aim of providing young people with an opportunity to develop in life. 

Specifically, The Youth Charter Tackles educational non-attainment, health inequality, anti-social behaviour and the negative effects of crime, drugs, gang related activity and racism by applying the ethics of sporting and artistic excellence. These can then be translated to provide social and economic benefits of citizenship, rights responsibilities, with improved education, health, social order, environment and college, university, employment and enterprise. 

    

Written by: Staff Writer

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