Report on Spain's democracy by Alessio Perrone.
Flavia Mutamutega, Rwanda’s sole agony aunt for adolescent girls, tells Veronique Mistiaen about the problems that preoccupy them.
Victory for UK school data, writes Alessio Perrone.
Mark Engler considers popular resistance to mass shootings and increasing healthcare costs in the US.
A story of cause and effect doesn't tell us everything about the relationship between social media use and mental health, argues Marcus Gilroy-Ware.
Hussein Kesvani reports on how young Muslim women are using social media to create a safe space to self-educate and share ideas.
Young Africans need to resist the way they are being spoken about, argues Wangui Kimari.
Millennials have been condemned to a life of permanent adolescence. Despite the obsession with all things shiny and new, Yohann Koshy argues that young people are using old-fashioned ideas to chart a way forward.
Elizabeth Katta talks about the lingering impacts of teenage pregnancy, which spiked during Ebola.
Gangsters turned mobilizers, the Tripoli Boys kicked Ebola out of their neighbourhood. Amjata Bayoh and Mohamed S Camara find out what happened next.
Bankolay Turay’s story of student romance on ice.
Young delegates inside the Paris climate summit were frustrated that the media were ignoring key issues. So yesterday, they took matters into their own hands, Morgan Curtis reports.
A new global youth action network – the Climate Strike – was born in Paris this week. Marienna Pope-Weidemann and Samir Dathi were there to hear their plans.
Eilis O'Neill on the struggle for free, quality, universal education.
A group of young Chechens is battling to save their social club, reports Alice Lagnado.
Dan Hancox on the skilled young people who, after thirty years of Spanish democracy, are finding their options increasingly limited.
Linah Alsaafin voices youth frustration with the double bind of Israeli occupation and defunct Palestinian leadership.