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What Do Gen-Z Want from Nepal, Madagascar, Peru, and Morocco?

The New World Order Phase

By Keramatullah WardakPublished 3 months ago 3 min read

Across continents and cultures, a single generational voice is echoing louder than ever before Gen-Z. From the streets of Nepal and Madagascar to the plazas of Peru and Morocco, young people are rising up, challenging corruption, inequality, and unresponsive governments.

They’re not waiting for permission. They’re demanding transparency, accountability, and a fair chance at shaping their countries’ futures. This is more than protest — it’s a generational revolution.

Who Are Gen-Z ; A Historical Evolution

Generation Z, born roughly between 1996 and 2010, are the world’s first true digital natives. They’ve grown up with smartphones, social media, and global awareness.

Unlike past generations who waited decades for reform, Gen-Z can organize, mobilize, and amplify their message in hours. Their activism is decentralized; run by hashtags, live streams, and memes; but deeply purposeful.

They’ve seen climate disasters, job insecurity, and institutional corruption. They’re not content with symbolic gestures; they want systems that actually work.

The Common Cry; What Gen-Z Want

Despite cultural differences, their messages align. Gen-Z everywhere wants:

  • Honest leadership; free from corruption and nepotism
    • Basic public services; reliable electricity, clean water, quality healthcare, and education
  • Economic opportunity; real jobs, not promises
    • Freedom of speech and digital rights; especially online
  • A government that listens, not silences

    These demands sound simple, but for many countries, they represent a complete overhaul of old systems of privilege and power.

The Movements Across the World

Nepal

Protests began after a government-imposed social media ban, seen as a direct attack on free expression.

Gen-Z demanded the Prime Minister’s resignation, corruption investigations, and institutional reforms. The movement’s power forced a national reckoning; and proved that digital restrictions can no longer silence a generation raised online.

Madagascar

Frustrated by power cuts, poor infrastructure, and poverty, young people took to the streets. They demanded accountability, better services, and an end to leaders who fail their promises. Inspired by Nepal’s success, the Malagasy Gen-Z movement became a symbol of cross-continental solidarity.

Morocco

Youth protests have called for better healthcare and education, job creation, and fair resource allocation. They criticize lavish spending on prestige projects while essential services crumble. This shows a deeper demand; a new social contract between the youth and the state.

Peru

A proposed mandatory pension law triggered mass youth protests. For Gen-Z Peruvians, this law symbolized deeper problems: corruption, insecurity, and economic frustration. They’re demanding not only reform but a fair, inclusive future that respects the sacrifices of working citizens.

Why Gen-Z Matters

Gen-Z represents more than one-third of the global population — and an even larger share of the digital one. They’re not just the “future leaders.” They are today’s disruptors, organizers, and visionaries.

They matter because:

  • Their discontent reflects real structural issues; corruption, unemployment, and repression.
  • Their protests often ignite reform in neighboring countries.
  • Their values; fairness, inclusivity, transparency; are reshaping global norms.
  • Their actions redefine legitimacy; power now depends on listening, not force.

    Tailored Solutions; Listening Before the Storm

    If leaders want stability, they must act. Here’s how:

    1. Transparent Governance

    Publish audits, expose corruption, and make youth part of decision-making.

    2. Youth-Focused Economies

    Support startups, vocational training, and public-sector job programs.

    3. Education & Health First

    Invest in schools and hospitals before building stadiums and statues.

    4. Digital Freedom

    Stop censoring — embrace social media as a platform for dialogue, not control.

    5. Constitutional & Legal Reform

    Limit political monopolies, ensure accountability, and protect protest rights.

    6. Bridge the Generational Gap

    Encourage collaboration; elders with wisdom, youth with energy.

    How Gen-Z Could Change the World

    If these movements succeed, the world will not be the same.

    • Politics will modernize: from closed-door decisions to transparent governance.
    • Social contracts will evolve: citizens will demand performance, not promises.
    • Democracy will deepen: governments that listen will gain legitimacy.
    • Global activism will merge: Ideas shared across borders will strengthen solidarity.
    • Economies will benefit: Empowered youth means innovation and productivity. This is not chaos; it’s evolution.

    Challenges and Realities

    Yet, the path is steep.

    • Repression can silence momentum.
    • Co-option by political elites can dilute goals.
    • Lack of structure can fragment movements.
    • Economic limits may delay visible results.

    But every generation has its tests; and this one is showing remarkable resilience.

    The Power of a Connected Generation

    The world’s youth are no longer whispering. They are marching, posting, and demanding justice — from Kathmandu to Antananarivo, Lima to Casablanca.

    Their message is universal:

    “We deserve dignity, fairness, and a voice in our own future.”

    If the world listens, Gen-Z could become the most transformative generation in modern history — building societies that are more just, transparent, and humane. If ignored, the cost will not be protest; it will be permanent disillusionment.

    The choice is ours.

    controversiesnew world orderpoliticswomen in politicsactivism

    About the Creator

    Keramatullah Wardak

    I write practical, science-backed content on health, productivity, and self-improvement. Passionate about helping you eat smarter, think clearer, and live better—one article at a time.

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