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X-WR-CALNAME:Bangalore International Centre
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20260711T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20260711T130000
DTSTAMP:20260704T174341
CREATED:20260702T181026Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260702T181026Z
UID:91358-1783767600-1783774800@bangaloreinternationalcentre.org
SUMMARY:Do Bengaluru’s Young Leaders Have Hope for This City?
DESCRIPTION:Bengaluru is one of the most youthful major cities in India\, with nearly half its residents between nineteen and forty. The city is growing because of its youth\, and youth keep coming because the city is growing. This energy shows up in business as well as leisure. The city is young\, vibrant and alive. \nYet beneath the momentum lies a growing unease. Every monsoon\, floods in Bellandur and Marathahalli disrupt tens of thousands of lives. The average commuter loses over 168 hours to traffic annually. The RCB stampede in June 2025 turned collective joy into a sharp public question about who is responsible for keeping people safe. This is where most young Bengalureans are: aware of what is wrong\, but unsure what to do about it. \nWhich is what makes the next few months so significant. Bengaluru is returning to the polls after nearly a decade without municipal elections. But structural change doesn’t automatically mean more participation. Last time\, turnout was just 45%. Young people are registering to vote but not casting their ballots. \nAre Bengaluru’s youth disillusioned with polls and civic life? Between elections\, do young citizens engage with ward committees\, public consultations\, and neighbourhood platforms where budgets are discussed? What will it take to pull the youth off the sidelines and into action?  \nThe 4th session of The Bengaluru Debates brings together young civic leaders\, activists and changemakers to wrestle with these questions\, followed by an audience Q&A. \n‘The Bengaluru Debates: A BIC–Janaagraha Dialogue Series on Urban Governance in Bengaluru and Beyond’ aims to expand civic space in the city by fostering conversations through a civic lens. The series is designed to be informative\, constructive\, and entertaining\, while also serving as a trigger for local community action. Its objective is to bridge the gap between policy\, practice\, and public discourse on urban governance challenges\, and to catalyse citizen and policymaker engagement towards systemic solutions. \nIn collaboration with: \n \nJanaagraha Centre for Citizenship and Democracy\, founded in 2001 in Bengaluru\, is dedicated to transforming the quality of life in India’s cities and towns. Their mission is to strengthen the systems of urban governance so that cities can deliver clean\, green\, safe\, and liveable environments for all citizens. For them\, ‘quality of life’ is not only about infrastructure and services\, but equally about responsive institutions\, citizen engagement\, and transparent\, data-driven governance. \n\n\nThe Bengaluru Debates\nRSVP here (https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe1CH2XfJ4HiRaagHomcpD7El-Z2ekZnopVpXTAaMt6BYTsGg/viewform?usp=pp_url)\n*Speakers*: Sarthak Sidhant\, Rishvanjas Raghavan\, Vibha Nadig\, Koushik Dhayal\, Srikanth Viswanathan\n*Event Categories*: Bangalore\, Governance\, Politics\, Society
URL:https://bangaloreinternationalcentre.org/event/do-bengalurus-young-leaders-have-hope-for-this-city/
LOCATION:Bangalore International Centre\, 7\, 4th Main Road\, Domlur II Stage\, Bangalore\, Karnataka\, 560071\, India
CATEGORIES:Bangalore,Governance,Politics,Society
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://bangaloreinternationalcentre.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/Thumbnail_TBD4.jpg
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