Young generations are disproportionately affected by the mass-destruction of our natural world. During our lifetimes, we will face the ever-worsening consequences of biodiversity and climate breakdown. Youth for Ecocide Law was founded in 2021, in response to growing frustration among global youth over the lack of action to address these crises. We call for clear legal guardrails to hold political and corporate decision-makers accountable when they cause severe and widespread or long-term harm to our futures.

The Y4EL network was officially founded around the Stockholm+50 International Meeting, where The Global Youth Position Paper for S+50 included a call to: “Recognize large scale environmental destruction, ecocide, as a punishable crime in domestic laws and in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.”

Since then, Y4EL has grown exponentially. We represent the youth constituency within an intergenerational, global movement to criminalize ecocide. Our ambitions are to empower youth voices in the environmental movement; to build bridges between civil society, young people, the UN policy process, corporate decision-making, and government policy; and to promote intergenerational respect. Our network meets monthly to discuss ecocide law, build capacity, organize mobilizations, plan events, and more!

Young people need to lead the way, because it is our future that hangs in the balance at high-level environmental decision-making tables.

Thus, we call upon all governments to support the implementation of an international ecocide law.

 
 

Read: Ecocide Law and the Rights of the Child

How legal recognition of the most severe harms to nature could protect children’s rights.


Young generations, though least responsible, are set to feel the greatest impacts of the climate and ecological crisis we face. But as young people, we refuse to simply be victims of environmental breakdown.

We are critical drivers of urgency, solutions, and hope.

 
 

Read articles in partnership with WYCJ:

Laila Martins (Y4EL) raises important issues that are integral to both youth campaigns while answering questions posed by Maëlle Blacharz (WYCJ). 

WYCJ’s Maëlle Blacharz and Aditi Shetye talk about the importance of youth participation while answering questions raised by Laila Martins (Y4EL).


Earth Day 2023

Youth for Ecocide Law organised this Earth Day webinar on April 22nd, 2023 as a venue for listeners around the globe to learn about ecocide law, the growing youth movement, and how the push to criminalize ecocide could support many other youth-driven environmental justice campaigns.

As part of our efforts to raise awareness, we also organised a series of Youth Regional Dialogues on Ecocide Law on Earth Day, the 22nd of April 2023.


Why ecocide law?

An international crime of ecocide will create a global safety rail - a legal force-field which could stop severe harms to nature and help direct government policy, banking, investment and insurance away from dangerous practices and towards a safe and peaceful future on a healthy planet.

It would also mean that key decision makers; CEOs, government ministers etc, whose decisions threaten severe environmental harm, could be held personally accountable and face criminal charges.

Find out more here: Making ecocide a crime


Are you a young artist and/or communicator on environmental and climate issues? Would you like to publish your work and support the movement to #StopEcocide in the process?

Youth for Ecocide Law is curating an Artbook and we want to showcase the work of young creators!

Sound good?
Submit your art today!


 

Other useful resources:

This toolkit will give you everything you need to tell the world about ecocide law.

Find out more about how you can get involved here.

Webinars, events and conversations all centered around making ecocide a crime.

Coordinated by the Stockholm+50 Youth Task Force, this policy paper aims to ensure the views of as many young people are represented - including making ecocide an international crime.

Give a talk and spread the word using this slideshow. Guidelines on how to give a presentation with speaker notes here.

Key developments and milestones from countries all over the world.


Co-Lead Youth for Ecocide Law

Léa Weimann is an eco-activist and poet. She became a Youth Ambassador for Stop Ecocide after the historic Stockholm+50 Conference and was the Youth for Ecocide Law Spokesperson at COP27.

Co-Lead Youth for Ecocide Law

Debbie Buyaki’s backgrounds are in Criminal Justice, Criminology and International Law, but she goes by many hats. Her recent preference has been that of a tree planter, founding a project that now covers six of the seven continents.


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Stop Ecocide International is delighted to collaborate with Youth For Ecocide Law on this initiative
and support with resources wherever appropriate.