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This blog is a global conversation among young people on poverty and other development-related issues. It's maintained by the World Bank's Youthink! team

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Notes from the heartland of industrialization…

From the little island of Malta, I now blog from Ann Arbor, Michigan—my home for the Northern hemispheric summer… The links between the two distant spots date back to organized emigration programs, where hundreds were encouraged to take the trip to the empire of Henry Ford and other production lines in search of greater and better opportunities.

I have landed in what is certainly a very different socio-economic picture. Malta and Michigan seem to have little in common apart from the presence of a Maltese community here and a spate of returned migrants from the US whose houses fly the stars and stripes on what is now the “other side” of the Atlantic. Yet these economically successful migrants are a generation dying out.

Obamania in Cairo

Some were excited, some were told not to stand on their balconies, and many were even given the day off of work. Cab drivers were saying it was a great day…Why? Because although many presidents have come to Egypt (mostly to Sharm El Sheikh, a resort on the Red Sea) this was the first time for a US President to come to Cairo. It was a big deal, with roads being paved and cleaned in the days leading up to US President Obama coming to Cairo. It was also one of the emptiest days on the streets.

Youth supporting youth

In last week’s post I mentioned Youth Factor (YF), a U.S.-based non-profit that supports COJDECA (the Guatemalan youth empowerment project). Well, as promised, this post is about YF as another example of what youth can do to make this world a better place.

YF is a joint effort between young professionals from diverse countries who realized that their abilities and resources could be used to support grassroots youth organizations like COJDECA. Incorporated in fall of 2008, the mission of YF is to “advance youth empowerment globally by forging strategic partnerships to achieve greater outcomes for youths and communities”. As YF’s Directive Board puts it, “Youth Factor sees young people as the world’s most underestimated factor for affecting change in communities, programs, and policy. As of 2008, there were nearly 1.8 billion young people between the ages of 10 and 24 on the planet. That is the largest number of youths the world has ever seen. We cannot ignore the potential power of this rising generation. Young people are taking a lead in community and global change, but they need our help.”

Time to Re-enlist Science (and Condoms) in the Fight against AIDS

My favorite part of Barack Obama’s inauguration speech was "We will restore science to its rightful place and wield technology's wonders to raise health care's quality and lower its costs." Science and the scientific method – the process of making decisions based on observable, empirical and measurable evidence – have profoundly changed the way much of the human race (and even some of the luckier animals) live in this world.

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