resource
Published on September 25, 2019
September 2019
Youth Climate Report, in partnership with the United Nations Climate Change Secretariat and Television for the Environment, runs a program known as the Global Youth Video Competition. A call for entries is issued each year asking youth reporters around the world aged 18 to 30 to create three-minute videos under certain themes. The 2019 themes were:
1. Nature-based solutions for food and human health
2. Balancing use of land for people and ecosystems
3. Cities and local action to combat climate change
The top filmmaker in each category is flown to the host city of the COP conference that year to present their films and participate in the two-week conference.
2019 Winning Films
Category 1: Balancing Use of Land for People and Ecosystems
Winning Video: "Reserva: The Youth Land Trust" made by Callie Broaddus, USA
Category 2: Cities and Local Action to Combat Climate Change
Winning Video: "Ocean Alive" made by Raquel Gaião Silva, Portugal
Category 3: Nature-based Solutions for Food and Human Health
Winning Video: "What is Agroecology?" made by Rafael Forsetto and Kiane Assis, Brazil
Themes | Planetary Health |
Status | Active |
Related Work | |
Updates |
UNESCO Announces Official Partnership with Youth Climate Report | September 1, 2020
Mark Terry at COP25 | December 17, 2019 Youth Climate Report Announces 2019 Themes | June 26, 2019 |
People |
You may also be interested in...
Announcing the Winners of the 2024 Seed Grants in Critical Social Science Perspectives in Global Health Research
Following the fifth annual Critical Perspective for Global Health Research (CPGH) workshop in April, the CPGH Steering Committee is delighted to announce that the following York researchers have been awarded this year’s $7,000 seed grants ...Read more about this Post
York University funds $4.05M to support interdisciplinary research for the UN SDGs
The research projects advance knowledge in areas ranging from water remediation, management of infectious disease through technological innovation, the effects of climate change on ecosystems and human populations, visual neuroscience, and understanding the pathway from ...Read more about this Post
Celebrating Theresa: Honoured as an Emerging Leader at York University
Theresa Dinh, Institute Coordinator, was recognized with the 2024 Gary Brewer Emerging Leader Award at the recent President's Staff Recognition Awards ceremony– a distinction that recognizes an early-career professional who has demonstrated significant promise of ...Read more about this Post
