BARMM bets on youth research—but will P1M grants translate to real policy change?

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Five young researchers receive a total of P1 million in grants from the Bangsamoro Youth Commission (BYC) on March 25 under the Ideation Impact Challenge (IIC) 2026. (Photo courtesy of BYC)

COTABATO CITY (April 2)  — Bangsamoro Youth Commission has awarded ₱1 million in research grants to five young scholars under its Ideation Impact Challenge (IIC) 2026, backing studies that promise to tackle long-standing youth issues in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

Each grantee received ₱200,000—modest funding that the commission says is meant to seed “practical, evidence-based solutions” in areas like education gaps, youth development, governance, and digital engagement.

But beyond the ceremonial turnover in Cotabato City, a familiar question lingers: will these studies shape actual policy, or remain shelved outputs?

The five funded studies reflect urgent, ground-level concerns:

  • the uncertain pathways of out-of-school youth in Cotabato City 
  • the disruptive impact of clan feuds (rido) on education in Lanao del Sur 
  • barriers faced by students with physical impairments 
  • the need for culturally grounded, gender-responsive school counseling 
  • and the growing challenge of ethical digital behavior among senior high students 

These topics mirror persistent structural issues—conflict, exclusion, and digital vulnerability—that require more than recommendations. They demand sustained funding, political will, and cross-agency coordination.

The BYC says findings will feed into frameworks like the Bangsamoro Youth Development Plan (2025–2030). Still, integration into policy does not guarantee implementation, especially in a region where overlapping mandates and limited institutional capacity often slow reform.

The Ideation Impact Challenge positions itself as a pipeline for evidence-based policymaking. The real test, however, lies beyond research outputs: whether BARMM’s leadership will institutionalize these insights into budgets, programs, and measurable outcomes for its youth.

For now, the ₱1 million grant signals intent. What remains uncertain is impact.

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