It’s mid-summer, and the ancient boreal forests of northern Alberta have been on fire since early May. Near the town of High Level, a 351,000-hectare fire still blazes out of control. The town and Indigenous communities nearby have been evacuated once already this fire season, and High Level remains in a state of local emergency. The wildfire has also periodically closed the only highway to Yellowknife, one of Canada’s most northern cities. Perched on subarctic tundra, it depends on the thoroughfare for fresh food and goods year-round. Canada’s North is a young place. The average age of those in the region is a decade younger than the rest of the country. In Nunavut, to the northeast, the median age is 24.7 years old.

And in northern Canadian communities, young people watch the forests burn, the permafrost melt, the animals flee or die off and the oceans rise as the world’s older adults assure work is being done to solve what has become an existential threat to humanity itself. The world’s youth, led by activists such as 16-year-old Greta Thunberg of Sweden, have risen up to demand immediate action. But what action is occurring often disregards young people at every level. While their voices may have reached media networks, the power of their collective talent has not been fully harnessed. It is imperative we act now to integrate youth into climate emergency leadership, and the work of adapting to the climate crisis. At the ResiliencebyDesign (RbD) Research Innovation Lab at Royal Roads University in Victoria, B.C., our work addresses how to do exactly that. Our projects engage youth in climate action using art-based methods to increase awareness, actions and coping strategies. The outcome is a powerful social approach that helps youth explore and grapple with the harsh realities of the future. In late May, as Europe’s youth held climate strikes and rallies, I joined my climate action colleagues at the European Climate Change Adaptation Conference in Lisbon, Portugal, to share the types of methods the RbD Lab uses to engage and involve youth in climate leadership. The conference brought together 1,200 climate scientists, public policy and community development changemakers, business leaders and public infrastructure stewards to integrate climate science with strategies for systemic change.

During the conference, I presented on the methods and findings from several of the lab’s projects — including one where northern youth acted as thought leaders as their community recovered from a climate disaster. The RbD team spent extensive time in northern Alberta among the young people affected by the monstrous Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo region wildfire of 2016, as part of Youth Voices Rising (YVR) research project. We worked with the region’s youth to strengthen their engagement and decision-making influence in Wood Buffalo as it recovers long-term from the half-million-hectare fire. Using photography, art, music and song, these young people have envisioned a community better able to survive and thrive in the uncertain future we face. The project’s youth leadership recently presented a report with recommendations to the mayor and council of the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo in November 2018. Their ideas to build resilience touched on almost every aspect of community life, from transportation to education, health and wellbeing, volunteerism and community inclusion. Through the process of imagining how their community could adapt and recover, the youth participants discovered something about themselves: a growing sense of resilience. “Working towards the goal of making a concrete change in the community helped me with my recovery,” writes 19-year-old Aishwarya Gurumurthy, a survivor of the 2016 fire, in the final report. If our world is to adapt to climate change, building resilience in youth is essential. Ultimately, they are the leaders who will solve this complex crisis, the runners who will carry our torch through a very long race. Successful adaptation requires their voices, ideas and actions at every level of this critical conversation. Robin Cox is a professor at Royal Roads University and the director of the ResiliencebyDesign (RbD) Research Innovation Lab.