We are thrilled to announce the winners of this year’s ACT Bright Future Prize, which searches the world for the next generation of community leaders.
Our shortlist of eight fantastic finalists represented five different countries, and each with their own project and passion to make a difference to the people and world around them.
The winners of our four categories share the prize fund of £40,000 – with the funding empowering them to turn their bright ideas into a reality. This year’s shortlist was so impressive that, for the first time, ACT is providing grants to all finalists, meaning a total of over £50,000 awarded to our 2023/24 cohort.
ACT’s Bright Future Prize remembers Freddie Williams, son of Ardonagh colleague David and his wife, and Independent ACT Trustee, Sarah. When Freddie died following a four-year journey with bone cancer he left the contents of his money box to ACT with a simple message: ‘To help pay for special treats for the next poorly child’. This simple gesture led to the idea of the Bright Future Prize, which seeks to enable young people to make a positive impact – and as part of Freddie’s continued legacy, David and Sarah help select our Bright Future Prize winners.
Join us in in congratulating our 2023/24 Bright Future Prize winners and all eight of the inspirational teens who reached this year’s shortlist.
We are delighted to reveal the four winners of the ACT Bright Future Prize 23/24.
Each of our winners impressed our ACT Trustees not only through their project ideas, but determination to take action to lead positive change – and all exemplify the Bright Future Prize’s mission to invest in future community leaders.
They share the £40,000 prize fund, securing £10,000 (or equivalent local currency) each from ACT to invest in their fantastic bright ideas.
Aid Avengers are a group of six teens– Carrie, Louie, Mikayla, Emma, Robyn and Amy – who all go to school at Coláiste an Chroí Naofa in Cork, Ireland.
Together, they are determined to improve the life-saving skills of young people in their local area – and across the whole of Ireland. Being in a rural area, the importance of first aid is paramount to community wellbeing and they aim to educate a new generation of first aiders by creating a network of trained young people in communities around the country.
Already, they’ve been making the most of their individual skills sets – creating animations, holding awareness activities, producing their own branding and just this month hosting a first aid event with support from the local fire service. They are filled to the brim with ideas just waiting to get put into action.
Chloe has two passions, coding and the environment. Through her self-founded initiative, Code<Green/>, she uses interactive programming to educate young people about climate change, its impact, and to inspire others to take action. Already, Chloe has mentored over 150 children in Melbourne through workshops and created a prototype of an online learning platform.
Now, she wants to take Code <Green/> to the next stage, expanding to reach more young people across Australia – and the world. Conscious of access to technology, as well as programming, Chloe is developing a suite of board games which will make the information and skills she’s eager to share more accessible, particularly in rural areas of Australia. She’s also evolving her online platform, so that it can offer even more resources and establishing a network of volunteers to expand the reach of her workshops.
Íris has a dual perspective to her surroundings and community. Having grown up in Brazil, just over a year ag she and her family moved to Leiria in Portugal. Since this transition, she's seen the devastating impact that forest fires can have on a community and the environment, having experienced them first hand in her local area. Fire is a significant area of risk across Portugal, which includes the devastating impact and loss of life in the region of Pedrógão Grande in 2017, which remains close in the memories of many people.
With dreams of being an engineer, Íris has harnessed these aspirations to begin her own project to improve safety in her home of Leiria. Her innovative app design uses a traffic light system to provide an alarm system which could potentially prevent the loss of life and habitat. With support from MDS Portugal, part of Ardonagh Global Partners, Íris hopes to be able to turn her plans into action.
Manganye is an avid source of entrepreneurial spirit in his home, the rural town of Itsani in Limpopo. Full of ambition and a keen baker, he aspires to open his very own community bakery business in his hometown, with the aim of encouraging young people just like him to think big and think bold.
Already, he's been part of a host of pop-up events and markets to hone his baking and business talents, and now wants to set up his own bakery to develop not just his own skills but to support other people in the community to do the same.
He plans to create a purpose-built bakery which will specifically hire and train young people in his local area – setting them on their own path to success. The bakery will also be a hub for community activity and events, bringing everyone together.
This year’s eight-strong shortlist were so incredible that for the first time, ACT has awarded grants to each of our four remaining finalists to help them develop their projects.
Anna is a hugely passionate advocate of good mental health and has already been at the forefront of action in her local community in Rio de Janeiro to support the wellbeing of her peers. She has established her own youth mental health project, which aims to further understanding of mental health and ultimately to prevent suicide.
Now, she plans to extend the project’s conversation circle events, collaborate with professional psychologists and provide excursions, which otherwise are often not possible for young people in her area of Rio.
Kagiso is incredibly enterprising, having earlier this year set up his own community development project called 'Kagiso Kgatle Foundation'. Through the foundation, Kagiso works to inspire young people in and around Phake, a rural town in South Arica, to develop their leadership skills and support them to reach their personal goals. Through the project, he's worked closely with several schools to hold mini events, which has led to over 100 people registering their interest, and now he’s establishing a board of young people to take the project to the next stage.
Imogen is on a mission to create a support space for young people who have experienced or been impacted by the youth justice system in Australia. Unfortunately, many young people are directly or indirectly affected by crimes, which may or may not result in the perpetrator's conviction. Imogen wants to make sure these young people do not feel isolated or abandoned, by creating a dedicated hub space where young people can connect with one another and access support.
Statistically, girls quit sports at one and a half times the rate that boys do, and by the age of 17, over half of girls take part in no sport. This is where Isabel's innovative idea, 'HerSportHub', aims to make a difference.
Combining her two passions, coding and sport, Isabel has created a dedicated app which she hopes cultivate a network of girls that thrive on sport and to connect them with clubs and groups in their area where they can access activities. In addition, the app will provide a hub to showcase women role models in sport and to share resources and events, in Cork and across Ireland.
Since the launch of Bright Future Prize, ACT has awarded over £110,000 to aspiring young people committed to making a difference to the people and world around them.
Discover more about our previous Bright Future Prize winners, including our 2022 winners Kaydi, Sara, Jeffrey, Muhammad and our 2021 winners, teen-trio, Dawn to the Light – whose own projects include self-build wooden wind turbine kits, using martial arts to combat loneliness in elderly people, and creating video games to support mental health.
You can learn more about all our previous winners and the story behind the prize on the Bright Future page of the ACT website.
To date, ACT, together with our 11,000+Ardonagh colleagues around the world, has raised over £5.5 million and supported over 1,000 causes.