NEW YORK — A well-connected, privately-funded initiative sees small, low-barrier acts of community outreach as the key to fostering civic engagement among young people.
The nonprofit C&S — previously known as the Institute for Citizens & Scholars — is inviting schools, employers and other partners to encourage young people to lead activities such as calling elected representatives, volunteering locally or hosting public conversations with neighbors of differing backgrounds. The goal, announced Wednesday, is to empower 20 million people between ages 14-24 to take some sort of public-spirited action over the next three years.
''You're not going to immediately go to a gym and try to bench press 325 pounds. You're gonna start easy, simple, something you can do — both to affirm and start to build your muscle,'' C&S President Rajiv Vinnakota said. "That's what these civic actions are all about.''
The effort counters popular narratives that members of Generation Z, born roughly between 1997 and 2012, are unengaged or resigned. It's one of several pushes tied to the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence's signing that is aimed at uniting Americans to address shared challenges.
Civil society has also seen a greater push to promote ''informal volunteering'' among Gen Zers. Jennifer Sirangelo — the president and CEO of Points of Light, a nonprofit that wants to double American volunteerism by 2035 — finds that younger people tend to embrace service opportunities that aren't affiliated with institutions. Instead, she said, they are helping their neighbors or asking birthday party attendees for donations to a cause.
''Gen Z wants to do it fast, they want to do it authentic, they want to do it right now,'' Sirangelo told The Associated Press last month. "They don't have time -- no patience for institutions or signing up.''
Informing the C&S approach is internal research that suggests young people will get involved if they see their participation will have a meaningful impact and are given the opportunity to develop solutions themselves.
The biggest barriers to civic participation, according to C&S, are that young people don't know where to begin and don't believe they can make a difference.