Friday, September 13, 2013

EUROPEAN UNION YOUTH CONFERENCE OF LITHUANIAN PRESIDENCY

EUROPEAN UNION YOUTH CONFERENCE OF LITHUANIAN PRESIDENCY
9-12th September 2013, Vilnius

JOINT CONCLUSIONS

The EU Youth Conference is an element of the Structured Dialogue process which brings together young people and policy makers across the European Union to jointly discuss and inform the development of youth policy at national and European level.

The Structured Dialogue process was established by the Council of the European Union in its Resolution for a renewed framework for cooperation in the youth field (2010--2018). The Structured Dialogue process is an important instrument to ensure that the opinions and views of young people are taken into account in the formation of policies in the youth field. For the 18 month cycle from 1 January 2013 to 30 June 2014, the trio Presidency (Ireland, Lithuania and Greece), in cooperation with the European Commission and the European Youth Forum have agreed that the theme of the Structured Dialogue process throughout the cycle is Social Inclusion. Each of the three consultation phases reflects this thematic priority, with the results from each phase informing the next phase, leading towards a collective outcome at the end of the cycle. Specific priorities of Presidency contribute to the overall thematic priority of social inclusion.

The Lithuanian EU Youth Conference was the second conference within the Trio Presidencies of Ireland, Lithuania and Greece, highlighting the theme of the social inclusion of young people who are not in employment, education or training (NEETs).

The goal of the Lithuanian Presidency EU Youth Conference was to come up with conclusions
from the workshops, on the basis of the compiled results of national consultations. The outcome of the Lithuanian Presidency EU Youth Conference is a list of conclusions that can serve as a basis for possible inclusion in policy documents to be progressed through the EU Council of Youth Ministers:

Council Conclusions on the enhancing of social inclusion of young people who are not in
employment, education or training (NEETs);

Council Resolution on Structured dialogue with young people on social inclusion.
Seven thematic areas drawn from the results of national consultations provided by 28 Member
States and 17 International Non-Governmental Organisations were explored at the Youth
Conference via Joint workshop sessions. Young people and Ministry officials from the 28

Member States have jointly defined the following conclusions.


1. ADAPT Education to the Needs of Young People and Demands of the Labour Market

- EU Member States should increase the number of social scholarships as well as improve
means-tested financial support for covering study-related costs (i.e. text books, school
equipment, meals, etc.) and develop learning infrastructure, including access to affordable
transportation.

- EU Member States should ensure that education systems are tailored to individual learners
in order to develop active citizens with social values, general knowledge, life skills and
professional skills. The education systems must facilitate open and flexible transitions
between different phases of education.
- Inclusion and diversity training should be ensured for all educators as well as engaging
learning environment for all learners. Interactive tools, modern equipment, quality facilities
and a variety of learning methods should be provided by the relevant authorities.


2. INFORM and GUIDE Young People in their Transitions

- The EU Institutions and Member States should make it a youth policy priority to improve
quality, outreach and capacity of information and guidance services for young people on all
levels, specifically regional and local, and to cooperate with information networks.

- The EU Institutions and Member States should ensure ring-fenced funds for specialised
information and guidance services and diversity training for practitioners to facilitate the
transition of socially disadvantaged youth into education, employment or training.

- The EU Member States should support cooperation between families, educators, schools
and information service providers to deliver cohesive information and guidance to young
people in transitions in order to help them make informed decisions.


3. FACILITATE the Transition from Education to Employment

- Formal and non-formal education providers should proactively build sustainable
partnerships with employers in order to integrate practical job-related experiences into
education and to offer more opportunities for quality internships and apprenticeships,
structured and monitored training schemes, available for all young people.

- Governments in cooperation with employers and non-formal education providers should
develop and promote tools for assessment and self-evaluation of the competences acquired
through non-formal education in order to guarantee the recognition of such competences in
the labour market and to develop the employability and self-confidence of young people.

- The EU Institutions should adopt a binding framework to ensure that all internships in the
European Union are of quality and sufficiently remunerated. Member States should offer tax
or other incentives to employers for providing such internships.


4. IMPROVE the Labour Market for Young People

- EU Member States should ensure that their legal frameworks prevent discrimination against
young people, based on age, and that young people are entitled to the same employment
conditions, remuneration and rights as other workers, therefore leading to strengthening
intergenerational solidarity.

- Governments should support entrepreneurship by simplifying administrative procedures
through establishing a one-stop shop and online services, and enabling access to free legal
advice, as well as providing financial support and tax relief to young entrepreneurs, and
incentivising private investments 1 into start-ups.

- Governments should increase youth employment by putting in place tax incentives for
employers to create quality jobs under the following conditions: jobs should respect the
guidelines from ILO Decent Work Agenda 2; should be based on long-term contracts and
should not replace already existing jobs.

5. SUPPORT for Young People’s Autonomy

- EU Member States should develop and implement national policies on access to affordable
and decent housing for all young people, including NEETs, students, employees, among
others, in order to ensure their autonomous life.

- EU Member States should guarantee easy access to youth-friendly welfare services in order
to support the autonomy of young people, in particular those at risk of social exclusion.

- EU Member States should provide and coordinate social integration services and
programmes from information and guidance to tailored training for young people. This
should be implemented in cooperation with educational institutions, local authorities and
youth organisations.

1 Examples of incentivising private investments are angel investors, seed funds and venture capital, among others.

2 International Labour Organisation. Decent Work Agenda. http://www.ilo.org/global/about-the-ilo/decent-workagenda
lang--en/index.htm


6. ENHANCE the Role of Youth Organisations

- EU Member States should establish or develop national coordinating bodies for the Youth
Guarantee involving representatives of youth organisations and other social partners in
designing the planning, implementation and monitoring of the Youth Guarantee scheme on
national level.
- EU Institutions and Members States should invest in youth organisations to ensure that all
young people have access to non-formal education, especially young people who are
socially excluded, NEETs and young people from remote areas.
- Decision-makers at all levels should recognise the representative role of youth councils and
youth organisations by establishing a clear legal framework through which their
independence and involvement in the decision-making process will be ensured.


7. DEVELOP Cross-Sectoral Cooperation

- To enhance social inclusion of NEETs, European Commission and Member States should
improve coordination and implementation mechanisms of cross-sectoral cooperation based
on evidence and practical knowledge, mutual interest, exchange of information, shared
responsibility and adequate resources for implementation and follow-up.

- Governments should ensure multi-stakeholder quality cooperation through developing joint
goals and implementation mechanisms while guaranteeing youth participation in decision
and policy making processes by involving national youth councils and other relevant youth
representatives.

- European Commission in cooperation with Member States should produce a study on
existing practices


No comments:

Post a Comment