How Iceland Saved Its Teenagers – BBC News
n 1998, 42% of Iceland’s 15 and 16 year-olds reported that they had got drunk in the past 30 days. By 2016, though, this figure had fallen to just 5% and drug use and smoking had also sharply declined. The action plan that led to this dramatic success is sometimes called “the Icelandic Model” – and strikingly, it does not focus on tighter policing or awareness campaigns to warn children off bad habits. Instead, top researchers collaborate closely with communities on initiatives like parental pledges and night-time patrols after dark, while the government invests in recreational facilities. But is being a teenager in Iceland still fun?
Post Series: Iceland
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- 2.Iceland’s Down Syndrome Dilemma
- 3.From Iceland with Love
- 4.How Iceland Saved Its Teenagers – BBC News
- 5.How Iceland Beat The Banks
- 6.The Tech That Could Fix One of Wind Power’s Biggest Problems
- 7.The Tech That Could Fix One of Wind Power’s Biggest Problems
- 8.Afforesting Iceland – a cause for optimism
- 9.An energy plant with negative CO2 emissions
- 10.Turning CO2 into stone in Iceland – earthrise
- 11.Why Misunderstanding Killer Whales is Threatening their Survival | Earth Unplugged
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- 13.Puffins | National Geographic