Calafia

LEARN MORE

  • Stipend/Gift Card
  • School Credit
  • Community Service/Volunteer Hours
  • Authorship on Publications/Letters to the Editor
  • Transportation Reimbursement
  • Grant/Scholarship

Calafia is yli’s statewide youth policy journal that amplifies the narratives of young people on topics and issue areas important to them and their communities.

Calafia Fellows are selected every year from each yli office to create and edit the issue’s theme and the stories presented. They are also mentored by experienced reporters, travel to statewide and national media conferences, and learn the steps to producing a printed publication.

Podcasts

In 2023-2024, Calafia fellows created the podcast, False Promises: the Chasm between Home and Hope to uplift the voices and experiences of people impacted by injustice.

This year, Calafia veterans Nancy Aguilar and Katelyn Chang helped us pilot our newest component of the program, the 3rd Year Special Project. Working with Pulitzer finalist Bernice Yeung as their mentor, they developed a 4 episode podcast called The Creative Code, which explores the impact of generative AI on youth creatives. Over the 9 months, they built their own project curriculum, conducted interviews with representatives from the National Writers Union and former Marvel employees, and surveyed over 100 youth creatives about their experiences with AI. The podcast (below) was picked up by the online news outlet, Capital & Main, which wrote a feature story about the project: Young Artists Worry About a Future Supplanted by Artificial Intelligence.

Publications

HOT OFF PRESSES: Calafia’s newest print publication, False Promises: the Chasm between Home and Hope!! Download your digital copies in English and Spanish below, or contact María Schindler at [email protected] to order your FREE print copies. Calafia’s past issues have focused on youth criminal justice reform, educational equity, and addressing stigmas within communities of color – the issues are available for download below!

Interested in Applying?

  • Are you between the ages of 16-22?
  • Do you live in California?
  • Are you passionate about writing/journalism and social justice?

Sounds like you’re a perfect fit for Calafia – Youth Leadership Institute’s statewide youth journalism program!!

From September to May, you’ll learn how to write personal narratives, opinion editorials, and podcasts – and work with a professional journalist and earn a stipend along the way! Expectations include:

  • Attend one, 1 1/2 hr meeting per week
  • Meet with media mentors
  • Conduct research and interviews
  • Complete several journalistic assignments that will be compiled into a print and digital pub

*Applications are closed for Calafia 2425. Please fill out this interest form to stay in the loop about next year’s application process!

Want more information? Reach out to María Schindler ([email protected]), watch the below recording of our Youth Orientation and read our Frequently Asked Questions!

Read the Latest Calafia Stories

First-Generation, Second Chances

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yli is My Story

When I look in the mirror, I see a daughter of Asian-American immigrants and a first-generation student. This is the ongoing story of my life, shaped by my family’s journey in a foreign land and my own relentless pathway to college.

Falling into the Fight Ahead

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yli is My Story

Will I know what spring feels like again? Where the flowers bloom. Or will our soil continue to be covered with the mess of profit over people? This is the future I do not accept!

Chasing Stability: The struggle for a home in Oakland

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yli is My Story

People say “Money can’t buy happiness” but if money is the key for my mom not to worry and cry and fight with my dad, that would make me happy. It will make my siblings happy because my mom wouldn’t have to work so hard and my dad wouldn’t have to work so hard and could actually make time for me and my siblings. Whoever said money can’t buy happiness must’ve never gone through my struggles.

The American Dream is a nightmare

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yli is My Story

At just 15 years old, I hopped on a plane without my mom. How do I even write about being miles apart from the person who supported me my entire life, or begin to fathom her not even attending my high school graduation? I can’t.