Railway Children to present at Skoll 2026
Railway Children will join partners from the Rooted Futures collaboration at the 2026 Skoll World Forum to lead an interactive session on family strengthening and child protection reform.
Through our Youth Associations, young people in Tanzania are leaving the streets behind and building brighter futures.
Young people in Tanzania are leaving the streets behind and building brighter futures.
Date: 24th January 2024
For many of the children we work with in Tanzania, an essential part of their journey off the streets is being reunified with their families or placed in a nurturing, family-based environment.
But this isn’t always possible with young people. And that’s where our Youth Associations come in.
Our Youth Associations bring together young people, aged 15-24, to learn new skills and empower each other.
Together, members choose a trade such as mechanics, tailoring or catering which can lead to apprenticeships or the chance to set up their own business. Young people can then start building a stable income and supporting themselves in the long term.
Part of this transformation is the life skills members build up around punctuality, communication and behaviour – all essential components for success.
Through taking part in sports and recreational activities, as well as a camping trip, team members also quickly build trust and cooperation, enabling them to support each other through the programme.
We celebrate young people becoming self-sufficient and leaving the Youth Association with a graduation ceremony. Independence and self-reliance are the indicators that a Youth Association has done its job.
Still, many young people who have gone through the programme stay in touch and look for ways to give back.
Some get involved in outreach to other children and young people still living and working on the streets. Others may support Youth Associations that are just starting up.
In this way, the impact of the model – and the impact of your support – goes on long after a Youth Association has ended.
£49 could pay for the tools a young person needs to complete their vocational training, enabling them to build a better future for themselves.
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Railway Children will join partners from the Rooted Futures collaboration at the 2026 Skoll World Forum to lead an interactive session on family strengthening and child protection reform.
Over 200 supporters from the rail industry raised more than £60,000 at Railway Children’s Night At The Station event, spending a night in stations across the UK to protect vulnerable children at risk.
Through our flagship youth participation programme, Youth Platform, young people are shaping our training materials, influencing key decisions and ensuring the rail industry truly understand youth vulnerability.
No child wants to survive on the streets. And, through understanding and empowerment, together, we can ensure no child has to.
Julia, 24, grew up as a boy but knew, early on, that the gender she’d been born into was not who she was. Here, she talks to Youth Platform about her journey, and what she wishes she’d know as a ten-year-old boy.
Reflecting on the unique strengths different minds bring to Railway Children and the rich potential of the neurodivergent young people we support.