Forsidebilde av showet HUDL Up

HUDL Up

Podkast av HUDL Youth Development Agency

engelsk

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Les mer HUDL Up

HUDL Up explores stories from across the HUDL Network, where we hear from young leaders, practitioners, and partners shaping a fairer future: one project, one conversation, and one connection at a time. Holding space for real stories, shared power, and collective change. Visit https://www.hudl.org.uk for more information about how you can get involved.

Alle episoder

10 Episoder

episode Full Circle: Start Well. Hold Well. End Well. cover

Full Circle: Start Well. Hold Well. End Well.

Keji and Floree return for Episode 10 to bring the first series of HUDL Up full circle. After opening the series with their own journeys and connection to HUDL, they reflect on the conversations, projects, teams and themes that have shaped the podcast so far, from shared power and youth participation to care, belonging, transitions, programme delivery and collective change. This episode introduces the HUDL co-production framework: Start Well. Hold Well. End Well. Keji and Floree explore what HUDL has learnt about co-production, power and holding the work properly, and why meaningful youth involvement takes more than creating space for young people to speak. It requires structure, care, skilled facilitation, clear roles, honest decision-making, paid opportunities and a commitment to making sure young people’s contributions can shape what happens next. As the first series closes, this episode also looks ahead to what is coming next, including new programmes, teams, debate club and behind-the-scenes learning from across HUDL. Listeners are invited to help shape the next series by sharing what they want HUDL Up to explore in more depth. Learn more about HUDL here: https://www.hudl.org.uk [https://www.hudl.org.uk/] Subscribe to HUDL Up for more episodes that hold space for real stories, shared power, and collective change.

8. mai 2026 - 49 min
episode What’s Next: Transitions, Trust and Carrying the Work Forward cover

What’s Next: Transitions, Trust and Carrying the Work Forward

In this episode of HUDL Up, we explore what it really means to navigate transitions with Dan Seifu and Melanie (Mel) Da Silva Pinto. Dan reflects on his journey from the first cohort of the Involving Young People’s Collective (IYPC) to his current roles in the sector, covering grantmaking and governance, while Mel shares what it feels like to be on the edge of her own transition, approaching the end of her time in the Collective. Together, they unpack what they’re carrying forward: from values-led practice and collective ways of working, to the importance of joy, care, and staying rooted in community. They speak honestly about the tension between holding on and letting go and the challenges of navigating new spaces without losing yourself or compromising your values. This conversation reflects on growth and the ongoing work to build more joyful and more equitable ways of working and making change. Whether you’re in the middle of a transition or anticipating one, this episode offers a grounding reminder that you never really leave experiences behind, you're always carrying them with you. Learn more about HUDL here: https://www.hudl.org.uk [https://www.hudl.org.uk/] Subscribe to HUDL Up for more episodes that hold space for real stories, shared power, and collective change.

29. april 2026 - 49 min
episode From Participants to Practitioners: The Journey of HUDL Associates cover

From Participants to Practitioners: The Journey of HUDL Associates

In this episode of HUDL Up, we explore what happens when young people transition from participating in youth programmes to designing and delivering them. Betty Mayo, Kimberly Garande, Louis Peters, Teian Roberts and Thalia Papanicolaou, who are all HUDL Associates, reflect on their journeys into the organisation. Many of them first connected with HUDL as participants in programmes like the Involving Young People Collective, the BBC Children in Need Youth Leadership Programme, and Mission 44’s Youth Advisory Board. Today, they facilitate, coordinate and shape those same programmes for the next generation of young leaders. The conversation explores what it really means to step behind the scenes of youth participation work: designing sessions, holding space for young people, building relationships, and balancing the needs of both participants and partner organisations. They discuss how their perspectives shifted from participating in a programme to helping deliver it, the unexpected skills they’ve developed along the way, from facilitation and communication to programme design and data analysis, and the challenges of working across multiple projects while supporting young people through complex transitions. The episode also reflects on the responsibility of “holding” a programme: creating environments where young people feel confident, supported and prepared to contribute meaningfully to decisions that affect their communities. This episode is about growth: how participation can become leadership, how lived experience can shape programme delivery, and how young people can move from being in the room to building the room itself. Learn more about HUDL here: https://www.hudl.org.uk [https://www.hudl.org.uk/] Subscribe to HUDL Up for more episodes that hold space for real stories, shared power, and collective change.

20. mars 2026 - 48 min
episode Power, Care, and Lived Experience: Inside the Future Communities Collective cover

Power, Care, and Lived Experience: Inside the Future Communities Collective

In this episode of HUDL Up, we explore what it really means for young people to share power in grantmaking and how trauma-informed practice can shape the way those decisions are made. Suranne, Phoebe, Ladajah and Fatima from the Future Communities Collective reflect on their experiences working alongside the Co-op Foundation to design and deliver funding that supports young people across the UK, including those with experience of the criminal justice system. The conversation explores how lived experience shapes better decision-making, the emotional weight of hearing difficult stories while deciding where funding goes, and how the collective works to support each other through that process. They also discuss what trauma-informed practice looks like in real terms: creating spaces where young people feel safe to speak, building trust over time, setting shared boundaries, and ensuring participation never becomes tokenistic. This episode also examines the barriers young people still face when entering spaces like grantmaking, ranging from a lack of awareness about these opportunities to imposter syndrome and structural inequalities. It also covers why paying young people, offering flexibility, and building genuine relationships are essential for meaningful participation. Above all, this episode is about care, responsibility, the power of collective decision-making, and what becomes possible when young people are trusted with real influence. Learn more about HUDL here: https://www.hudl.org.uk [https://www.hudl.org.uk/] Subscribe to HUDL Up for more episodes that hold space for real stories, shared power, and collective change.

11. mars 2026 - 50 min
episode From Vision to Impact: The Journey Behind the Future Communities Collective cover

From Vision to Impact: The Journey Behind the Future Communities Collective

In this episode of HUDL Up, we explore the journey of the Future Communities Collective: from its beginnings, to its impact, and to what comes next as members transition on. Louise Snelders from the Co-op Foundation is joined by Keshon, Zak and Saffai, outgoing members of the Future Communities Collective. Together, they reflect on how the Collective was formed, why the Co-op Foundation chose to work alongside young people, and what it’s meant to shift power in funding decisions. The conversation looks at how young people moved from expecting a limited role to holding real decision-making influence, how the Collective has changed the Foundation’s culture and practice, and what it takes to do this work in a way that is meaningful, rather than tokenistic. They also explore the challenges of balancing life alongside the work, navigating disagreement, building confidence, and learning to handle responsibility, including what it means to be trusted with decisions that shape real funding outcomes. Learn more about HUDL here: https://www.hudl.org.uk [https://www.hudl.org.uk/] Subscribe to HUDL Up for more episodes that hold space for real stories, shared power, and collective change.

4. mars 2026 - 53 min
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