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South Africa Community Campus

Start Date

23/03/93

End Date

31/12/24

Location

Soweto, South Africa

Lead

Youth Charter, Republic of South Africa

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The Youth Charter's Sport for Development and Peace work in Post-Apartheid South Africa started in 1993 at the Vision for Sport for Conference. The Youth Charter's South Africa Office was then launched in 1996 as part of the countries annual Youth Day which commemorates the Soweto Youth uprising of 1976, when school children took on the Apartheid regime. 


The Youth Charter Games Legacy work in South Africa has included supporting the Cape Town 2004 Olympic bid and the South Africa 2006 and 2010 FIFA World Cup bids and hosting. As part of our Manchester 2002 Commonwealth Games Legacy work the Youth Charter took a group of young people on a Spirit of the Streets tour of South Africa.


The Youth Charter '30' South Africa Report was launched in Soweto on 16th June South Africa Youth Day in 2023.

Soweto Community Campus


The Youth Charter was born in 1993 in response to the tragic loss of 14 year old school boy Benji Stanley, who was shot dead on the streets of Moss Side, Manchester and has since attempted to provide alternative social and cultural activity benefits through sport, arts and lifestyle choices. What is not known is how closely the respective fortunes of young people in two separate continents, in two cities as remote in distance as Moss Side and Soweto would, through their similar social and cultural barriers be “provided with an opportunity through tragedy to develop in life through sport”.


As cities of sporting and musical power, their respective love of Soccer is also evident with both cities the home of leading Premiership Clubs in Manchester City and United and The Orlando Pirates and Keiser Chiefs in Johannesburg. Both Manchester and Johannesburg aimed to regenerate their respective cities through the Olympic and Commonwealth Bidding and hosting of Major Games.


The Youth Charter’s birth seemed almost inevitable, as the issue of youth exclusion and social and cultural deprivation provided as many challenges as they did opportunities. With social unrest and riots also identified within ‘the tale of two cities’, the cultural divides have always explored the role of sports recreational and leisure potential to foster greater social and cultural cohesion between people of different race, culture, religion or gender.


As Manchester’s failed 2000 Olympic Bid became Manchester’s successful Commonwealth 2002 Games, the Youth Charter began a unique and ongoing journey with a number of visits to the new South Africa. This saw many of the inspirational examples of social development through Sport translated to the Moss Side experience.


Future Champions: A South Africa 2010 FIFA World Cup LegacyOpportunity4All...


The Youth Charter’s SCLP and Soccerwise programme has provided a 2010 FIFA World Cup legacy contribution to the Gauteng Government. The Youth Charter Founder and Chair, Prof. Geoff Thompson MBE FRSA DL, delivered the Social Coach Leadership Programme (SCLP) to Community Soccer coaches at the Future Champions Soccer Tournament held in Johannesburg South Africa. International Teams from all over the world gathered at this annual tournament and cultural heritage experience where U17 champions of the future trained together and competed against each other. The first Future Champions SCLP session with young mentors from the Nike Changes Lives programme was delivered at the Nike Football Training Centre in Soweto that opened in 2010.

Inputs

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Time Utilisation

Hours

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Investment

Inputs

Outputs

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30

Stakeholder Partners

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3000

Participants

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300

Facilitators

Outputs

Video Gallery

Video Gallery

Image Gallery

Image Gallery

Impact Outcomes

Youthwise Project Outcomes are set against the following 7 UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that deliver the Youth Charter Community Campus Model and Legacy Cultural Framework:

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Education

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Health

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Citizenship

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Environment

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Further & Higher Education,
Employment & Entrepreneurship

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Collaboration & Partnership

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Equality, Diversity, Inclusion and Participation (EDIP)

Outcomes
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