Next Gen Challenge World Leaders in Youth Manifesto Following Davos 2026
PR Newswire
ST. GALLEN, Switzerland, June 17, 2026
Students aged 6 to 18 turn conversations with leaders into practical resolutions for education, industry and governance
ST. GALLEN, Switzerland, June 17, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Students of Institut auf dem Rosenberg have published the Rosenberg Youth Manifesto for Action, a student-authored set of findings, definitions and resolutions shaped by direct conversations with global decision-makers during Rosenberg House Davos at the 2026 World Economic Forum week.
The Manifesto will be officially launched on June 20, 2026. It turns students' questions, discussions and projects into concrete commitments and real-world examples that leaders in education, industry and governance can apply. Following the launch, the Manifesto will be available in digital and print format via Institut auf dem Rosenberg and its affiliated websites and channels.
The Manifesto follows Rosenberg House Davos, held from January 19 to 23, 2026 on the Schatzalp, where students engaged directly with global decision-makers, technologists, scientists, designers and cultural leaders through roundtables, workshops and salons. In January 2026, Institut auf dem Rosenberg made history as the first school to host a dedicated presence during World Economic Forum week in Davos, with sessions designed, led and hosted by teenagers. Participants included prime ministers, world leaders, educational institutions, creative thinkers, internationally recognised historians and philosophers.
Designed in collaboration with Climate Words, a non-profit organisation dedicated to climate literacy and the language needed to educate others on climate change, the Rosenberg Youth Manifesto is built to be used, not just read. It turns live dialogue into a structured set of definitions, action statements and proof points that help leaders move from intention to accountable implementation.
"What makes this Manifesto significant is not that it speaks on behalf of young people, but that it was written by them. Whether discussing artificial intelligence, urban resilience, education, or global cooperation, one message emerged consistently: young people do not want to be passive observers of change. They want to contribute to shaping it. The Rosenberg Youth Manifesto represents that commitment to moving from dialogue to responsibility and from ideas to action." - Bernhard Gademann, President, Institut auf dem Rosenberg
In the Rosenberg House sessions, students' questions directly shaped the Manifesto's resolutions including:
"What does responsible innovation require when our systems extend from earth to orbit and who is accountable?" - Syailendra Q. (Gr.11)
"What does leadership look like, when people expect autonomy to default and what must leaders stop doing and start doing?" - William H. (Gr.10)
Guest contributions helped the student authors sharpen the chapter focus and the final resolutions. In the spirit of the Manifesto:
"Young people should gain a better understanding of the world in which they live in, but without feeling the responsibility to actually manage it by themselves … ultimately, the responsibility of adults is to take care of the world so kids can focus on growing up." - Yuval Noah Harari, Historian & Author
"We should never be trying to create learning experiences in which there is only one generation in the room." - Dr. Caroll O'Donnell, Executive Director, Smithsonian Science Education Centre
What the Manifesto Delivers
While many large-scale youth reports primarily capture the views of older youth audiences, the Rosenberg Youth Manifesto is authored and shaped by students aged 6 to 18. It is a next-generation empowerment project in which young people do not simply comment on the future, but define practical next steps.
Built as a follow-up to Rosenberg House Davos, the Manifesto translates dialogue into a usable, implementation-ready format, including:
Student-written meaning, made usable
Short, real-world definitions of key terms, creating a youth-driven lexicon so important ideas do not remain abstract buzzwords.
Implementable resolutions
Ten clear rules of action per chapter, written to be adopted across education, industry and governance.
Blueprint actions leaders can apply
Concise guidance on what to do next, pointing to decisions, responsibilities and tangible first steps.
Proof from practice
Examples from students' own work and partner collaborations, showing how concepts move from discussion to reality through prototypes, pilots, charters and applications within the Rosenberg International Curriculum, RIC®.
A youth lens on trust and accountability
A practical approach to trust, based on clarity, transparency, follow-through and repair, demonstrated through action rather than slogans.
Rosenberg House Davos was developed by students of Institut auf dem Rosenberg in collaboration with partners across science, design, technology, finance, media and diplomacy, including MIT, ETH Zurich, UC Berkeley, Vitra, Diplomatic Courier, Smithsonian Science Education Center, Sapienship and the Tim Bergling Foundation, among others.
Notes
Rosenberg House is a standalone initiative and operates independently from the World Economic Forum without its endorsement.
Press Contact
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Tel.: +41 71 277 77 77
Email: info@issa-pr.com
Website: davoshouse.instrosenberg.ch | www.instrosenberg.ch
About Institut auf dem Rosenberg
Institut auf dem Rosenberg is an international boarding school, recently ranked as "the Best School in the World" for the second consecutive year by Premium Europe. The school's learning environment is defined by its educational philosophy and a team of educators known as the Artisans of Education, combining academic excellence with innovation, entrepreneurship, and real-world learning.
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