Creating Impact through Community Journalism
- Feb 9
- 2 min read

Today, communities are witnessing real change; cleaner environments, responsive assemblies, and more transparent local governance all sparked by the voices of young #CommunityJournalists (CJs).

In the heart of Dagbon Yendi, what began as a social media post about poor #sanitation in Guntingli and Zohe turned into a story of transformation.
After months of consistent #advocacy and follow-ups by a trained CJ under the Yendi Youth Parliament, the Municipal Assembly responded in March 2025 by clearing a long-standing refuse dump and instituting regular waste collection.

A similar transformation took place in the land of Yagbonwura, where filth took over the auspicious land causing nothing than dire #health issues. The youth of Damongo, leveraged social media to launch a #campaign exposing a collapsing waste mound. Within a week of the campaign’s launch in early June 2025, the West Gonja Municipal Assembly cleared the site an unprecedented response that underscored the power of youth voices and action.
These scenarios demonstrate how the youth are directly holding duty bearers accountable and driving change in real time.
Beyond sanitation and water issues, the Community Journalists have established themselves as credible actors able to report across diverse thematic areas under the E4L program and beyond. By applying tools such as the #Right to Information (RTI) Act, they are accessing credible information and amplifying community concerns through both social media and radio. Their stories have already brought attention to education challenges, sanitation, and governance gaps, sparking meaningful dialogue and concrete responses from authorities.
Perhaps the most significant shift has been in the way young people now perceive the role of social media. On the regular, many young people engaged with social media and radio primarily for entertainment. Today, they see these platforms as powerful tools for advocacy and change. In all ten districts, youth and Community Journalists are now consistently raising awareness on critical issues such as substance abuse, peacebuilding, and sanitation.
When youth are informed, organized, and capacitated, they not only understand pressing community issues more deeply but also mobilize collective action to address them. The Community Journalists approach employed by YEFL-Ghana continues to prove that amplifying youth voices through media can shift power dynamics, foster accountability, and create lasting impact in their communities.
Launched in 2024, the Empowerment for Life(E4L) phase IV had a special focus on youth capacity and agency building. Under this new phase, forty (40) youth selected form 10 districts across the 3 Northern Regions, were trained as Community Journalists (CJs), equipped with practical skills in journalism, social media engagement, and information gathering, advocacy, stakeholder engagement, and youth mobilization strengthening their ability to influence community development and governance.
The Community Journalism initiative has proven that when young people are equipped and trusted to lead, they not only inform but transform. Through YEFL’s guidance and the E4L framework, youth across Northern Ghana are reclaiming their voice, reshaping narratives, and setting new standards for accountability.
Documented By E4L Regional Team
Edited By Yakubu Hamdiatu
©YEFL's Comms Team 2026



























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