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Syrian youth design their future

Aga Khan Foundation

Syria · 14 May 2025 · 3 min

Young Syrians connect with each other as they learn the principles of human-centred design.

AKF / Ali Shaheen

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Hope, stability and prosperity for all Syrians


Close your eyes and think back to when you were a teenager. What were your dreams? Perhaps you envisioned a bright future – one filled with opportunities, growth and excitement. You had hope.


Now, imagine if your reality had been different – if instead of possibilities, you faced insurmountable barriers. Imagine if, instead of planning for your future, your daily life was about survival.


For many young Syrians, this is not an exercise in imagination. It is their reality.


Rebuilding the social fabric


Before the conflict, Syrian youth attended school, played sports and celebrated milestones with their families. Today, many live in temporary shelters with limited access to water, electricity and basic necessities. Unemployment is widespread, with 84 percent of girls aged 15-24 out of work, and 90 percent of the population living below the poverty line. In the face of these challenges, coping mechanisms such as early marriage and disengagement have become more common. Beyond the physical damage, the conflict has disrupted opportunities, strained community ties and left many young people searching for a sense of stability and belonging.


AKDN is dedicated to improving the quality of life for the Syrian people, especially the most vulnerable. We equip communities with the skills, knowledge and tools to drive their own development, and are committing €100 million over the next two years to help address the country’s urgent humanitarian and development needs.


Participants solved problems affecting their communities, seeing many of their solutions put into practice.

Participants solve problems affecting their communities, seeing many of their solutions put into practice. 

AKF / Ali Shaheen

The Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) has been helping rebuild the social fabric of communities through the TAMKEEN (empowerment) project. This brought together young Syrians from diverse ethnic, religious and socio-economic backgrounds to solve problems affecting their communities.


Through a series of social innovation sprints (short, intense design challenges), participants identified issues such as unemployment, lack of technical equipment and skills, and the absence of safe places to play. They presented their solutions for feedback before the community voted on which projects to implement.


Designing for social cohesion, peace and diversity

Innovation can go beyond technology to become a tool for healing, peacebuilding and reconnection.

Innovation can go beyond technology to become a tool for healing, peacebuilding and reconnection.

AKF / Ali Shaheen

The 28 funded initiatives included awareness campaigns on climate change and hygiene, environmental improvements like tree planting, training in robotics and 3D printing, and the creation of skills development centres in underserved areas offering essential courses in computer literacy, CV writing and job application skills.


One project voted through by the community was this wheelchair-accessible swing.

One project voted through by the community was this wheelchair-accessible swing.

AKF / Ali Shaheen

One project tackled the lack of accessibility in public spaces. This is a major issue given that nearly a third of Syria’s population lives with a disability, often caused by the conflict and exacerbated by the lack of healthcare services.


A diverse team collaborated to redesign public parks to be inclusive for the elderly and people with disabilities.


Their innovations included:


  • wheelchair-friendly pathways;
  • tactile navigation paths for the visually impaired;
  • inclusive seating areas and rest stops;
  • a specially designed accessible swing; and
  • a public awareness campaign to promote inclusivity.

This mindset-shifting project is being replicated across Salamieh, serving as a model of inclusive urban planning.


Creating leaders

“How might we encourage youth to practise their activities in safe spaces?”

“How might we encourage youth to practise their activities in safe spaces?”

AKF / Ali Shaheen

In these sprints, young Syrians didn’t just participate; they led. The 450 participants worked with their peers, learned design tools to analyse the root causes of problems, invented solutions and presented them for feedback before seeing their innovations make a difference in their neighbourhoods. They gained the self-confidence, empathy and leadership skills to see themselves not as victims of conflict, but as agents of peace, inclusion and change.


Given the tools, the training and the trust to innovate, young people can become the best architects of their own futures as they build a microcosm of the peaceful, pluralistic Syria they are working towards.


Read more about AKDN's work in Syria.


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