The third Global Indigenous Youth Summit on Climate Change (GIYSCC) will be held on 9 August 2025, circling the Earth with the Sun across three 8-hour time zones in 24 hours (00:00 UTC – 24:00 UTC) on the United Nations International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, hosted by Future Earth with Science Diplomacy Center™ coordination.
This global dialogue builds on GIYSCC 2024, and the inaugural GIYSCC 2023 which was hosted by the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) with 1300+ registrants from 112+ nations across 88+ languages and partners globally, including a legacy contribution with the invited Nature Commentary that Indigenous Youth Must Be at the Forefront of Climate Diplomacy.
There are more than 370 million Indigenous people in some 70 countries worldwide. Indigenous cultures and communities are precious intrinsically, but also as guides for all humanity with direct relevance for sustainable development across generations on Earth. Since the 20th century, humanity has been learning to operate as a globally interconnected civilization, represented clearly by the “common concern of humankind” in climate with its variability on a planetary scale across decades-to-centuries.
The breadth of challenges posed by climate change at local-to-global levels is a multilateral concern across the spectrum of subnational-national-international jurisdictions. At the same time, rapidly changing climatic conditions have increased levels of uncertainty and anxiety among the youth on Earth. Nonetheless, the unprecedented mobilization of youth around the world shows the massive power they possess as essential contributors to informed decision-making on planetary scale, which is symbolized by Earth’s climate. Youth and especially Indigenous youth have key roles to enhance multilateral cooperation on climate action, helping humanity to operate for the benefit of all on Earth across generations.
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