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Generation Citizen

The Power of Youth in Our Politics

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Required reading." —Josh Tickell, author of The Revolution Generation
Since its beginnings in 2009, Generation Citizen has grown to become one of the preeminent civics education organizations in America. Championing the activism of young people now and throughout history—from the civil rights movement to #BlackLivesMatter and the Parkland students—Generation Citizen is a bold reminder of the positive power of politics, and an inspiring, actionable guide for anyone ready to fight for democracy.
"Timely and accessible. The rising generation is ready to exercise power—and save our republic." —Eric Liu, CEO of Citizen University and author of You're More Powerful Than You Think
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  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2018

      Warren (cofounder and CEO, Generation Citizen) aims to inspire young people to become politically active. His organization teaches civics to U.S. middle and high schoolers, asking them to advocate politically for a local issue. Drawing from his experiences growing up in Kenya, Zimbabwe, and Ecuador at a time when each country was experiencing political change, Warren focuses each chapter on a different part of advocacy work. This includes selecting and learning about an issue, developing a personal narrative, realizing the power of teambuilding, and gaining power and influence. The author walks through the techniques used by Generation Citizen to show how broad goals and tactics can be narrowed to be more specific and actionable. Sections on learning from failure and engaging with political opponents are particularly useful. The concepts are illustrated with insightful, inspirational examples, and practical advice. Warren's democratic politics are shown in the examples provided, though he does occasionally make an effort to be bipartisan. He concludes by reflecting honestly on his organization's successes, failures, and improvements. VERDICT A useful resource for aspiring political activists with YA crossover appeal.--Rebekah Kati, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2018
      Why and how youth activists can make real political and social changes.Warren, co-founder and CEO of the national political youth movement Generation Citizen, makes his book debut with a pragmatic, anecdote-filled guide for empowering young people to "improve lives for themselves and for their communities." High school and college students, as well as young professionals like himself, have the ability "to change the current narrative of our democracy" by becoming "politically active not just on Election Day, but on every single day of the year." The son of a foreign service officer, by the time he entered college, the author had lived in multiple developing countries, where he had witnessed the "fragile nature" of emerging democracies as well as learning about atrocities such as genocide in Darfur. At Brown University, he built a student movement to persuade university, city, and state pension funds to divest their assets from companies with business in Sudan, a project that gave him a "crash course" in local politics and informed his founding of Generation Citizen. Working in schools to promote civics education, GC begins by identifying issues that matter most to students and then helps them narrow their concerns "to one local issue and identify a root cause of the problem," articulate "a specific main goal" and work on tactics for achieving it. Enacting change is a complex process, Warren writes, that involves studying the issue, developing expertise, constructing a narrative to make the issue accessible to others, engaging in productive dialogue with opponents, and amassing supporters. "It is crucial to recognize," he points out, "that problems are fundamentally intertwined." An issue such as climate change intersects "with other political realities, like poverty and housing." It is too easy, he warns, "to oversimplify a story and suggest that it is the only story." Warren cautions young people that failure is inevitable but should not be discouraging. The best antidote, he writes, "is to steady for the failures, embrace them, and learn from them."An enthusiastic, supportive manifesto to inspire political engagement.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:1100
  • Text Difficulty:7-9

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