Generation Z is not individualistic. She sets conditions for her commitment before committing. It’s not the same.
Young people are more lucid about their careers. Are they therefore better equipped to get involved?
Thirty years ago, we went into humanitarian work without calculating. We didn’t know if we would leave again after our first mission, or if it would become a career. We weren’t talking about professional trajectory, five-year career plan, balance between personal life and commitment. We left because something pushed us to, with a lightness that was not unconsciousness but confidence in the unexpected.
Thirty years later, we are still here. It wasn’t a calculation. It has become a life.
The young people entering the humanitarian sector today do not look like this portrait. They arrive with specific questions, articulated expectations, a vision of what they want to build. They think long term from the first interview. They are also often more anxious.
The question is not whether it is better or worse. It is to understand what it changes, for them and for the organizations that welcome them.
Lucidity as a starting point
The data on new generations at work converge on one observation: they are not individualists who flee the collective. These are people who set conditions for their commitment before committing.
A study by the Ipsos Observatory from June 2024 indicates that 72% of 18-28 year olds place autonomy as an important criterion in their relationship to work, and 80% of them make balance between private and professional life their first criterion for choosing an employer. These figures are often read as signs of withdrawal. They say something else: a generation which observed the exhaustion of its elders and which refuses to reproduce it.
Cornerstone research further nuances the picture: 77% of these same young people consider teamwork important, and 68% want a work atmosphere that allows them to flourish. This is not the portrait of a generation resistant to the collective. It is that of a generation that wants the collective to be worth it.
Humanitarianism as a test of truth
The humanitarian sector is a useful laboratory for observing this tension, because it pushes questions of engagement to the breaking point. You can’t pretend to be engaged when you work in a displaced person camp in South Sudan or in a conflict zone with no infrastructure. The commitment is verified under the most demanding conditions possible.
What HR managers have observed for several years is less a deficit of commitment than its recomposition. The young people recruited today are fully invested in their missions. But they arrive with an acute awareness of what they are prepared to give, and what they expect in return. They thought before leaving. They asked questions that previous generations did not ask, or only after several years of fieldwork.
This lucidity is a strength. It produces professionals who do not allow themselves to be surprised by the conditions on the ground, who have anticipated renunciations, who arrive with a more realistic representation of humanitarian work than those who set out on an unquestioned impulse.
It also involves fragility. Those who have carefully calculated their commitment may be more shaken when reality overwhelms their calculations. The unexpected, in humanitarian work, is not the exception. It is the permanent basis on which everything is organized.
Anxiety as a signal
The Conversation and Fnege note, in an analysis published in 2024, that the generational approach often reinforces prejudices more than it dissolves them. Disengagement or the quest for meaning are not generational symptoms: they are human reactions to a changing professional environment, which concern all categories of workers.
This diagnosis is correct. However, it should not erase what is specific to this historical moment.
Young people entering the world of work today have grown up with several simultaneous crises: financial, climate, health, geopolitical. They have developed a lucidity about the instability of the world which is not wisdom acquired through experience, but a starting point. This lucidity translates into a structural anxiety that previous generations did not have to the same degree, not because they were more courageous, but because they evolved in an objectively less uncertain context.
In humanitarian work, this underlying anxiety meets an environment that demands a lot of it. The question is not to eliminate it, but to support it differently.
Beyond the promise of meaning
The usual managerial response to this generation consists of promising meaning, autonomy, flexibility. These answers are not wrong. They are insufficient.
What committed young people are really looking for is consistency. Between what the organization says and what it does. Between the displayed values and the actual behavior of management. Between the promise of an impact and the reality of the resources allocated. The humanitarian sector, which is based on strong and visible values, is particularly exposed to this gap: disappointment is proportional to initial expectations.
Previous generations discovered these inconsistencies after several years in the field and gradually integrated them. New generations spot them more quickly, name them more clearly, and tolerate them for less time.
It’s not impatience. It’s demanding.
And the requirement, in a sector which recruits on values, should be considered as an asset, not as a problem to be managed.