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Encyclopaedia   Youth and Elections   YOUTH PARTICIPATION IN POLITICAL PROCESSES   Obstacles to Youth Participation  
Legislation that affects the environment for youth political participation

Citizen political participation requires an enabling legal environment, one that includes social and political freedoms guaranteed in democracies. In autocratic, developing and/or politically fragile countries, civic space is shrinking; there are an increasing number of countries restricting civic engagement by enacting laws that restrict freedom of expression and movement. This has a serious impact on citizen participation in political and electoral processes, especially for youth, who often use non-formal methods of participation, such as activism. 

Restrictions on expression, assembly and association limit the freedom of citizens to demonstrate peacefully, to engage in political dialogue, and to criticize politicians and candidates. The ability to share and access information and to document human rights abuses or irregularities in governmental and election processes, is fundamental to a healthy democracy. However, in the name of protecting their citizens against threats to their security, governments frequently limit access to information, and in the most extreme cases, cut off internet services entirely. 

Researchers have documented an increasing number of countries that have been suspected of or have blocked access to internet during elections. Additionally, some electoral commissions have asked phone companies to block more than a dozen social media outlets. Since young people are particularly active on social media, they are disproportionally impacted by any attempt to block these outlets. 

As they occupy the civic and political space with their online and offline forms of activism, many young people, who would otherwise try to keep governments, corporations and other state and non-state organizations accountable, are unable to do so.