FPCD

The L’Ouverture Academy Sports School Project

Projects to Support: Using Sport as a means of post-conflict development in Haiti:

With Haiti experiencing what is arguably the most challenging socio-economic conditions in its recent history as a g7+ nation, the country is calling for investment in education to empower Haition youth to reach professional opportunities and pull the fragile state out of its ever-growing gang recruitment. In order for that to happen, Founder and Director of Haitian Football Club Juvenat (FC Juvenat), James Louis-Charles proposes that investment into sport is the most viable way forward for Haition youth to access higher education and deterrant from gang activity. As the Athletic Director of Union School Haiti, James has seen first-hand the role that sport plays in empowering Haitian Youth. Alongisde colleage, Ryan French, they have co-founded The L’Ouverture Academy Sports School Project, which aims to provide the educational infrastructure and athletic support network to develop young, aspiring football players into promising athletes or students.

How it works:

Modeled after the Right to Dream Academy, the school will provide competitive education along with professional soccer training for the students athletes accepted through a rigorous selection process. The idea is twofold: first, to produce high-performing football players on track to professional recruitment, and second, to secure athletic scholarships for Haition youth at major universities abroad. Equally important, the school will focus on character development initiatives such as leadership skills, civic responsibility, gender equality, social inclusion and community service, to develop the next generation of competent and socially conscious Haitin leaders.

Why it is important?

Football has a high engagement level in Haiti with much talent waiting to be discovered and developed, coupled with a strong willingness for adolescents to continue education beyond high school. What is lacking is the educational infrastructure and athletic support network to develop young, aspiring football players into promising athletes or students. The Louverture Academy uses football as a launching pad for social and economic development in Haiti, an exemplary example of sport as a means of post-conflict development.