Applying the 7P Framework to Youth–Adult Partnerships in Climate Organizing Spaces: “If We Are Going to Be the Ones Living with Climate Change, We Should Have a Say”
Abstract
1. Background
2. Youth–Adult Engagement: Definitions, Examples, Gaps, and Possibilities
2.1. Definitions and Types of Youth–Adult Engagement
2.2. Disrupting Adultism as an Approach to Intentional and Meaningful Youth–Adult Partnerships
2.3. Youth–Adult Partnerships Critical for Transformative Change
2.4. Disempowering/Harmful Youth–Adult Collaboration Practices
2.5. Y-AP Conceptual Framework for Youth Participation
3. Methodology
Study Context
4. Findings: Applying the 7P Framework
4.1. Purpose
We would be receiving emails about every single thing that pertains to the Board, even though there’s 5 or 6 different working groups within the organization, and we are only responsible for the youth council. We were flooded with all of these emails that we didn’t know what pertained to us and what didn’t pertain to us. And then we would end up missing things that they were actually asking us.
4.2. Positioning
think it would have been really good to see teachers become more directly involved with their students’ projects and taking what they learned at the summit back into the classroom, and actually trying to run sort of like a small-scale project in their school community, or their greater community with their class where their teacher is helping more facilitate it, because that’s what we were trying to teach the teachers at the PD day and while the students learned a lot there weren’t exactly projects that we saw coming out from the summit directly tied to it.
one thing that sometimes can be found is the tokenization of youth in the sense that adults will use you purely for forwarding or furthering their agenda, and like making it seem to you that, you’re doing what you need to do, and you’re doing great, but once it really does get down to it they’re really just using you as a prop for whatever they need to get done.
what is being planned today surrounding climate change might not be applicable in 30 years. In fact, it probably won’t be applicable in 30 years and might not be applicable next year. So the concept of bringing youth into that discussion, I think, is really important, because we are going to make some plan moving forward for the future. The people who are going to be leading that plan, when it’s most needed, should really have a say in how it’s going just to ensure that it can still be functional, and it does still apply.
4.3. Perspectives
4.4. Power Relations
there were maybe some issues contacting people. Since I had one of our representatives to contact, there were some difficulties trying to get a hold of him and maintain a conversation. There was sometimes a long waiting period to get responses back. So I think maybe given the fact that it was coming from a student organization, sometimes things do get pushed back a little bit just in terms of prioritization, but overall I think it was actually a very positive experience.
It was like a very long email, pretty heavy-handed [from board]...And there’s this long list of things that we weren’t doing right according to the board and that we were like letting them down essentially…They were also completely ignoring all the work that had [been] done. And they were saying that we were ignoring money that they gave us and mismanaging it, and we were not coming to board meetings, and we were not being as active as they wanted us to be. The email ended saying that they had done a legal review and if things did not change immediately, they were going to think about dissolving the Youth Council out from under us.
So if you’re working with an adult on a level that you’re supposed to be equals, then decisions at some point need to be made as equals on both sides. I do think that the interactions often fall back into again, that school type, archetypal relationships between an adult and a young person that kind of lasts until you exit school and you have a job and money, and the money is a factor of it too, because you can’t plan things without money.
For the times that I have worked with adults on projects, I think it’s just overall been positive. I think the adults that work within climate change, or you know, sustainability usually are really supportive to youth, being a part of it as well and really encouraging. I felt that I’ve been treated fairly equally.
4.5. Protection
4.6. Place
4.7. Process
4.8. Psychological Factors (Following Thew et al.’s, 2022 Recommendation for Inclusion in 7P Framework)
4.9. Positive Impact as an Addition to the 7P Framework
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Youth Movement/Program Example | Details | Level of Citizen Participation (Arnstein, 1969; Hart, 1992) |
---|---|---|
Quebec Student Movement | During the student-led strikes in response to the 85% tuition hike in Quebec, there were both positive and negative experiences of Y-AP (Blanchet-Cohen et al., 2013). Many of the approaches of the student-led strikes involved youth-organizing techniques involving training camps with workshops and education, mentoring, and peer-led transformation partnerships and education (Blanchet-Cohen et al., 2013). The university, political, and societal authorities responded negatively to the actions led by the students and as a result, youth were infantilized, criminalized, and brutalized (Blanchet-Cohen et al., 2013). Blanchet-Cohen et al. contrasted the experiences of the students leading the strike to the researchers’ conducting studies on the strike and its effects. The adult researchers found that by generating and sharing knowledge on the strike and the students taking to the streets, that they helped to uplift the youth voices and shift some of their power, credibility, and voice to the youth (Blanchet-Cohen et al., 2013). | Citizen Control—The youth created and led the activist movement against the 85% tuition hike, and adult partners followed their lead, using their roles and voices to amplify existing actions led by youth. |
4H Youth Agricultural Program | The 4H agricultural youth program provides many strong examples of youth-led and Y-AP work. One study looked at the success of Y-AP in organizing a youth leadership summit (Schmitt-McQuitty, 2007). In this example, the adults supported youth by helping them connect with community service professionals, obtain funding, and organize the logistics of the summit, and the youth led the process and planning of the summit (Schmitt-McQuitty, 2007). During the partnership process, they clearly outlined and differentiated the roles of the youth and adults and defined how they would work together towards their shared goal of carrying out the summit (Schmitt-McQuitty, 2007). The youth explained that they felt that the Y-AP strengthened their ability to organize the summit. The trust and belief that the adults had in their skills and their offerings of support and resources facilitated an empowering experience (Schmitt-McQuitty, 2007). Another example of impactful Y-AP was in the 4H food smart families program where youth were engaged in roles as teachers within the program (Weybright et al., 2016). This teen teachers program had many positive developments for youth and improved their sense of belonging, independence, generosity, and personal growth including their experiences of connection, competence, confidence, character, compassion, and contribution (Weybright et al., 2016). In this Y-AP example, the components that made it meaningful were the mutual respect between youth and adults, the opportunities for youth to lead and teach, the adults acted as supportive mentors and coaches, it fostered relationships and friendships among the adults and peers, there were shared responsibilities but the youth also had independence and autonomy when they were teaching (Weybright et al., 2016) | Delegated Power—The 4H agricultural youth program is grounded in the 4H organization that is adult led; however, the youth were given the decision-making and execution power of the youth leadership summit and the adult partners provided services and help navigating the bureaucratic institutions that led to a successful summit. |
Gay-Straight Alliances | There are many impactful examples of youth–adult partnership in the history of Gay–Straight Alliances that were formed in the early 1990s. In one example given by Evans & Lund looking at youth–adult collaboration in the development of a GSA in the conservative small town of Red Deer, Alberta, adults served an important role in safeguarding the safe space for youth and challenging the systemic and social inequities that the youth were facing. This work exemplified that youth aren’t helpless and are very capable of self-organizing, but that they do benefit from having adult help to navigate the social, political, and institutional systems they live in (Evans & Lund, 2013), which is illustrated through the challenges youth face in navigating bureaucratic procedures to contribute to the decision-making on issues like climate change. | Citizen Control—The youth approached the adults for their support in creating Gay–Straight Alliances, but the development of the groups was youth-initiated. |
7P Value | Question for Consideration |
---|---|
Place | How will you respond to context, community, and culture? |
Process | What methods will you use to foster interaction? |
Protection | How will you ensure safety for youth considering intergenerational equity and honour the existential risks that climate impacts pose? |
Positioning | How will young people get to contribute, and how will their contributions advance climate justice? How will the intergenerational partnership benefit youth? |
Perspective | How will you ensure that all youth voices are present and accounted for in decision-making, uplifting those who are most greatly impacted by the climate crisis? |
Power Relations | How will you foster a community of respectful, reciprocal, and equitable relationships? |
Purpose | What contribution do you aim to make? |
Psychological Factors 1 | How can you reduce the risk of emotional and mental harm to youth in the partnership? How can you support youth through their climate-related emotions? |
Positive Impact | In what ways are youth ideas and perspectives integrated in meaningful ways to guide decision-making, strategy, and actions? |
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Field, E.; Barraclough, L. Applying the 7P Framework to Youth–Adult Partnerships in Climate Organizing Spaces: “If We Are Going to Be the Ones Living with Climate Change, We Should Have a Say”. Youth 2025, 5, 66. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030066
Field E, Barraclough L. Applying the 7P Framework to Youth–Adult Partnerships in Climate Organizing Spaces: “If We Are Going to Be the Ones Living with Climate Change, We Should Have a Say”. Youth. 2025; 5(3):66. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030066
Chicago/Turabian StyleField, Ellen, and Lilian Barraclough. 2025. "Applying the 7P Framework to Youth–Adult Partnerships in Climate Organizing Spaces: “If We Are Going to Be the Ones Living with Climate Change, We Should Have a Say”" Youth 5, no. 3: 66. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030066
APA StyleField, E., & Barraclough, L. (2025). Applying the 7P Framework to Youth–Adult Partnerships in Climate Organizing Spaces: “If We Are Going to Be the Ones Living with Climate Change, We Should Have a Say”. Youth, 5(3), 66. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030066