Advocates for Youth

Advocates for Youth is a nonprofit organization and advocacy group based in Washington, D.C., United States, dedicated to sexuality education, the prevention of HIV and of sexually transmitted disease, teenage pregnancy prevention, youth access to condoms and contraception (including emergency contraception), equality for LGBT youth, and youth participation. In addition, Advocates for Youth sponsors media campaigns and other forms of outreach which attempt to change societal norms to be more understanding of, accepting, of, and responsible about youth sexuality.[1]

Advocates for Youth has both domestic and international programs and creates and funds programs as well as lobbying for policies, including the Responsible Education About Life Act. Among its work is the preparation of educational materials, such as a publicity kit encouraging parents to talk to their children about HIV prevention, under contract from government bodies such as the Center for Disease Control.[2]

Mission and vision

Advocates for Youth's mission reads: "Advocates for Youth champions efforts to help young people make informed and responsible decisions about their reproductive and sexual health. Advocates believes it can best serve the field by boldly advocating for a more positive and realistic approach to adolescent sexual health."[3]

The organization also has a vision that is described in terms of its core values, the "3Rs." Those three Rs are rights (to accurate and complete sexual health information, confidential reproductive and sexual health services, and a secure stake in the future), respect (for youth by involving them in all aspects of programs that affect them), and responsibility (to provide youth with tools to safeguard sexual health, and for youth to protect themselves from pregnancy and STIs).[4] These values come from the observations of participants on an annual study tour in France, Germany, and the Netherlands that Advocates for Youth conducts to investigate reasons for better sexual health outcomes in those countries.[5]

Policies

James Wagoner, the president of Advocates for Youth, has described the organization's policies as an outgrowth of their support for "research-based public health policy" - rather than politically motivated.[2] The organization vocally opposed the sex education policies of George W. Bush's presidential administration, also criticizing the restoration of funds to abstinence-only education during the passage of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).[6] Policy priorities at the state, national, and foreign policy levels all focus around the general areas of reproductive rights and access, sex education, STI prevention, and LGBT youth rights.[7]

Programs

Advocates for Youth works heavily in collaboration with national, state, and local groups to run a number of initiatives. These focus on goals including contraceptive access for youth, teen pregnancy prevention, STI prevention, comprehensive sex education, and ending homophobia and transphobia against youth. All the programs and initiatives heavily involve youth as stakeholders. The Youth Activist Network, one of the biggest programs, focuses on peer education and activism and runs the Amplify website where young people can contribute articles on relevant topics.[8]

gollark: I mean, iPads less so, but the whole point of chromebooks is accessing "cloud" systems.
gollark: Technically, no, but in practice they are.
gollark: (chromebooks and other locked-down-but-with-web-access-and-stuff systems)
gollark: Weird how thin clients are increasingly becoming the trendy thing again, but in a different way to what people presumably thought.
gollark: Interestingly, you can run your own applications on it with some work (I made a RSS reader) and its browser appears to be kind of broken in a variety of ways and not enforce CORS.

See also

References

  1. Advocates for Youth's official website
  2. Schemo, Diana Jean (August 20, 2001). "PUBLIC LIVES - An Advocate for the Sexual Health of the Nation's Youth". New York Times. Washington. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  3. Advocates for Youth. "Mission". Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  4. Advocates for Youth. "Vision". Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  5. Advocates for Youth. "The Vision: Rights. Respect. Responsibility". Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  6. Stein, Rob (March 27, 2010). "Health bill restores $250 million in abstinence-education funds". Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  7. Advocates for Youth. "The Vision: Rights. Respect. Responsibility". Archived from the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  8. Advocates for Youth. "The Vision: Rights. Respect. Responsibility". Retrieved 1 May 2012.
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