Three Ways Youth Are Engaging With The Global Goals
CIVIC ENGAGEMENT - Young people are taking a stand all over the world, claiming their right to be an active part of the system because we have learned just how much we can be affected. We demand a place in decision-making processes because if it concerns us, we must be a part of the conversation.

SOCIAL MEDIA - This is one of the most powerful tools that youth have been utilizing to engage with the global goals. The incredible momentum that led up to the adoption of the global goals was spurred in part by young people and the use of social media apps, such as Twitter and Facebook.
YOUTH EMPOWERING OTHER YOUTH - The ECOSOC Youth Forum was important for the hundreds of youth from all over the world that gathered because they were able to hear from experts and people on the ground, but most importantly they were able to hear and interact with other youth. I truly believe this is the most effective and inspiring way youth are engaging with the global goals because young people are not only doing their work for the global goals, they are also bringing other youth into the conversation and uplifting the global community of young generations.


![U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to deliver remarks on U.S. engagement in the Asian-Pacific region on April 14, 2013. [State Department image/ Public Domain]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2013_0411_kerry_asia_m.jpg)
![Participants of the first @StateDept Tweetup pose for a photograph with Secretary of State John Kerry, Terese Heinz Kerry, and special guest First Lady Michelle Obama during the International Women of Courage Awards ceremony at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., March 8, 2013. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2013_0308_iwoc_tweetup_m.jpg)
![U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry boards U.S. Air Force Boeing 757 at Andrews Air Force Base en route to Europe and the Middle East for his first overseas trip as Secretary of State, February 24, 2013. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2013_0224_kerry_departure_m.jpg)
![Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton gestures during a town hall style meeting at the State Department in Washington, D.C., Jan. 26, 2010. [AP File Photo]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2013_0127_clinton_townhall_m.jpg)
![Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Tara Sonenshine, @TSoneshine, participates in a Global Twitter Q and A on December 5, 2012. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2012_1207_potw_sonenshine_twitter_qa_m.jpg)
![Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs Mike Hammer responds to questions from the State Department's official Spanish Twitter feed on January 24, 2012. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2012_0924_hammer_m.jpg)
![Members of the U.S. Presidential Delegation to the Closing Ceremonies of the London Olympic Games -- Ambassador Susan Rice, White House Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes, Michelle Kwan, Curtis Pride and Reggie Love -- pose for a photo tweeted by Ambassador Rice in London, August 11, 2012. [USUN photo/ Public Domain]](http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2012_0813_rice_olympics_m.jpg)