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Assembly of European Regions

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Regions leading innovation through smart jobs

16 April, 2013 By Mathieu Mori

During the Conference “Innovative Actions, Smart Jobs”, hosted by Avila County Council on 16 April 2013 in the framework of INTERREG IVC project Smart Europe, AER member regions discussed alongside politicians and policy makers from across the EU the specific issues and common challenges to overcome the economic crisis.

Promoting cooperation between SMEs and research institutes or universities, supporting the creation of clusters and innovative start-ups, stimulating job creation at local and regional level in order to tackle the growing unemployment rates, are a few of the topics on which public and private stakeholders exchanged best practices with the goal of boosting job creation in innovative sectors.

To visit the Smart Europe website please click here.

 

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AER mobilises stakeholders for youth employment

8 March, 2013 By Mathieu Mori

Young people are an asset in times of crisis, help them enter the world of work!

At an event on youth employment organized by AER at the College of Europe in Natolin, Warsaw (PL), 100 participants welcomed the fact that the issue of Youth Employment had been recognised as a top priority by all EU Heads of States and Governments, which granted a new amount of 6 billion € for the Youth Opportunities Initiative. We agree with the Council when it states that ‘the EU budget should be mobilised in support of job creation for young people’ and encourage the Council to keep its promises to adopt soon the new recommendations on the set up of Youth guarantee schemes. Actions taken towards the adoption of such schemes should highlight in particular: mobility and education to entrepreneurship.

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Ms. Michèle SABBAN, AER President, stressed that “in the absence of results towards Youth employability, no further action can be efficient. In the same way, without active youth, no social policy is possible.” She underlined that the AER Eurodyssey programme, created in 1985, already provides each year 600 young people looking for a job with an internship abroad. “42 European regions of 14 countries currently take part in this programme and I personally invite all other regions concerned with the future of their Youth to join our network”, she added.

The Polish Secretary of State for regional development presented a convincing example, when indicating that from now on, 75% of the European Social Funds (ESF) will go to the regions in order to set up policies supporting youth employment! By establishing the bridge between Member States and their citizens, Regions can bring the necessary support to their youth and have a major role within the settling up of Youth Guarantee Schemes that reflect their actual needs.

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The current maximum age to be considered to be eligible to the young person category (18-25) was also discussed, since a number of participants underlined that the age bracket should be extended to include those between 25 to 30 years of age, given that studies can sometimes take longer. This was said without hiding the unemployment problem that young people, with lack of qualification, are facing. Education levels are different; cultural and structural diversities also exist in Europe but young people form a whole that must be considered in its entirety.

For more information about the Youth Opportunities initiative

AER Programmes for Youth and employment: PYE – YES – Eurodyssey

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AER mobilises stakeholders for youth employment

8 March, 2013 By Editor

Young people are an asset in times of crisis, help them step into the workforce

Warsaw, Mazowieckie (PL), March 8, 2013

In the resolution adopted today, the Assembly of European Regions (AER) welcomes the fact that the issue of Youth Employment has been recognised as a top priority by all Heads of States and Governments, which granted a new amount of €6 billion for the Youth Opportunities Initiative. We agree with the Council when it states that “the EU budget should be mobilised in support of job creation for young people” and encourage the Council to keep its promises to adopt soon the new recommendations on the set up of Youth guarantee schemes. Actions taken towards the adoption of such schemes should highlight in particular: mobility and education to entrepreneurship.
Ms. Michèle Sabban, President of the AER, stressed that “in the absence of results towards Youth employability, no further action can be efficient. In the same way, without active youth, no social policy is possible”. She underlined that the AER Eurodyssey programme, created in 1985, already provides each year 600 young people looking for a job with an internship abroad. “42 European regions of 14 countries currently take part in this programme and I personally invite all other regions concerned with the future of their Youth to join our network”, she added.

The polish Secretary of State for regional development presented a convincing example, when indicating that from now on, 75% of the European Social Funds (ESF) will go to the regions in order to set up policies supporting youth employment! By establishing the bridge between Member States and their citizens, Regions can bring the necessary support to their youth and have a major role within the settling up of Youth Guarantee Schemes that reflect their actual needs.

The current maximum age to be considered as a within the young person category (18-25) was also discussed, since a number of participants underlined that the age bracket should be extended to include those between 25 to 30 years of age, given that studies can sometimes take longer. This was said without hiding the unemployment problem that young people, with lack of qualification, are facing. Education levels are different; cultural and structural diversities also exist in Europe but young people form a whole that must be considered in its entirety.

The event gathered 100 participants and has been hosted by the College of Europe in Natolin, Warsaw in Poland.

The Assembly of European Regions (AER – aer.eu) is the largest independent network of regions in wider Europe. Bringing together more than 270 regions from 33 countries and 16 interregional organizations, AER is the political voice of its members and a forum for interregional co-operation.

For more information: [email protected]

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AER Resolution: “Youth as a source and a lever of regional growth in times of crisis”

8 March, 2013 By Editor

The crisis which Europe is undergoing is a matter of deep concern to the Assembly of European Regions (AER) and its members. They decided to enhance their reflection on the role that Regions do and can play in order to face the impact of this crisis. In addition to specific studies and publications, AER therefore launched in 2012 a series of Summits on the Regions and the Crisis. A first Summit took place in September 2012 in Pescara, and a 3rd is planned on May 16, in Paris. The Warsaw Summit was the second in this series of events.

Although the crisis does not spare anybody, young people are particularly affected by it and youth unemployment is raising in Europe. AER, and its Youth Regional Network, thus decided to focus this second Summit on the issue of youth as a source and lever of regional growth.

This Summit, which in the frame of the 2013 European Year of Citizens had been widely open to the civil society sector, took place on March 8, at the College of Europe in Warsaw. Almost 100 participants, representatives from European, national and regional authorities, but also students and civil society stakeholders took part in the debates.

They exchanged about successful measures to foster youth mobility and youth entrepreneurship, considered to be two key elements to preventing and reducing youth unemployment, and restoring young people’s confidence in the future. At the end of their debates, participants agreed on the following Resolution and Recommendations.

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Peer reviews on creating innovative companies

1 March, 2013 By Mathieu Mori

Smart Europe Regional Peer Review in Veneto: intense, challenging, productive!

Boosting the creation of innovative companies

In the context of the Smart Europe INTERREG IVC project, 10 experts from AER, ALMI, Maramures, Flevoland, Patras and Bologna joined forces and brains for a one-week Peer Review in Veneto (I), from 25 February to 1 March. In order to find out how regions can boost the creation of innovative companies, peers were provided with extensive information on the regional economy and the activities of the different regional stakeholders. A tight schedule of interviews and visits to various business incubators and accelerators allowed them to better identify new ways to grasp the high R&D and manufacturing potential of Veneto. As a result, peers insisted on strengthening the role of the region as a catalyst and a facilitator for innovative business ideas and gave practical advice on how this could be implemented.

All you need to know about Smart Europe can be found here.

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Recommendations for Entrepreneurship Education in Europe

12 October, 2012 By Editor

Recommendations

  1. Wider understanding of “entrepreneurship education”
  2. Strong political commitment and support
  3. Sustained funding for activities
  4. Be integrated across the full education cycle
  5. Support to teachers
  6. Create regional support services
  7. Network and exchange of experiences

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Youth Entrepreneurship Strategies – Good practices

12 October, 2012 By Editor

For three years we in the YES project have been working with this question in our interregional team. We have different experiences and varying degrees of influence. We all, though, agree on one thing. Europe needs more positive attitudes towards entrepreneurship and the way to do it best is through the system that brings young people together i.e., the education system.

Through a joint survey in our partner regions, interviews with teachers, school principals and policymakers we now have a pretty good picture of the success factors and bottlenecks. Most of all we have come across 23 examples of best practice that we would like to share.

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European mobility: an asset in times of crisis

11 October, 2012 By Editor

Eurodyssey programme managers and coordinators met on 11 October 2012, in Strasbourg during the programme’s annual Forum. For the thematic debate, they invited members of the AER Bureau to discuss advantages and challenges of an ambitious mobility policy. Guest of honour at the first roundtable was Mr. Jameleddine GHARBI, the Tunisian Minister for Regional Development and Planning, whose presence brought an extra-European perspective to the debate. Following these political discussions, the second roundtable focused on a more in depth analysis of the terms and conditions of an effective Eurodyssey implementation, thanks to the input of key players from the programme.

The Forum thanked the Azores for their commitment and work during the past six years of Presidency and management of Eurodyssey. A call for applications is currently underway to identify the region that will take over starting mid-2013. The 2013 Eurodyssey Forum will take place in Corsica.

 

Find out more about our Eurodyssey programme

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Regions at the bedside of Europe

22 September, 2012 By Editor

Introduction

The financial and economic crisis that has plagued many countries worldwide and in Europe for the past several months is far from over. Regions are directly concerned by the budgetary restrictions that the situation requires. In this context, if one can welcome the setting up of the European Stability Mechanism as a key element, it will not be sufficient on its own. Restoring public finances and relaunching growth imply taking into more account policies implemented at regional level, which have shown to be efficient in a time of crisis.

The Pescara Summit allowed for an in-depth exchange of views among participants in four key fields for economic development, namely:

  • education and training
  • eco-innovation
  • support to SMEs
  • the link between culture, demographic change and economic revival

 

In those four fields, the following Recommendations have been adopted:

 

 

Recommendations

We, representatives of European Regions, gathered in the presence of national and EU representatives, of private stakeholders and associations in Pescara, Abruzzo, on 21-22 September 2012, convinced about the key role of regional authorities in the setting up of the growth objectives of the European Union, have adopted the following Recommendations:

 

  • Education and training: a motor for regional development

Education and training have a key role to play to prepare young people for working life, by helping them to develop competences and knowledge which will help them to find employment and improve their employability in the long term so that young people can better meet the demands of a changing world. In this context, Regions have an important role to play:

  1. It is important that the regions realize that combating youth unemployment also implies the transmitting of appropriate values. Therefore regions should consider ways of embedding generic employability skills in the school curriculum so that all young people are taught the core values and basic attitudes required by all employers, regardless of the particular profession they choose. This could include a work experience/placement programme for young people still in school or a raising of awareness for the value of work itself through early career guidance.
  2. Regions should have a more active approach towards young people who are Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEETs) and those at risk of early school leaving. They should 1) Take early measures to prevent early school leaving by establishing a long term monitoring system of those at risk of early school drop-out and those who are already falling behind; 2) Introduce an individual educational path for those mostly endangered, which will involve cooperation between a teacher, a psychologist, a pupil and parents. 3) Provide a second chance to return to school for those who have dropped out by establishing second chance schools.
  3. Regions should avoid a possible mismatch between the curriculum and the employers’ needs. As a consequence, regions should help voice the needs of their local enterprises towards the national authorities responsible for the design of the school curricula. Regions, if competent in this field, should also directly take the employers need into account when drafting their schools curricula.
  4. At the same time, it is necessary that regions encourage their schools to additionally focus on general, transferable skills (e.g. communication, teamwork, initiative, etc) so that young people can better adapt to various occupational areas and can be more flexible to meet the demands of a changing labour market.
  5. Regions should not underestimate the importance of vocational training to reduce youth unemployment. It is advisable for them to sustain incentives for employers to offer or support vocational training positions. In order to avoid precarious situations for the youth, regions should ensure that all students have suitable conditions for attending practical training with responsible employers, and that the students are paid in accordance with the law. Additionally, the vocational programmes should be as inclusive as possible and therefore aim at all unemployed young people (especially the long-term unemployed) to pursue further qualification or self-employment in order to prevent their de- professionalization.
  6. Traineeships or internships might be an alternative way into the labour market. Regions should raise awareness of these possibilities and improve young people’s perceptions of these employment-related steps that currently seem to be underevaluated. In order to reach this goal, regions could develop more specific, tailored interventions for young people – like an internship programme for secondary school graduates or an apprenticeship programme to create a ‘first step’ into the labour market.
  7. Mobility of young people must be enhanced. A traineeship or internship will have an even more beneficial impact if it is undertaken abroad. In this context, the AER Eurodyssey programme which allows each year more than 600 young people to undertake an internship abroad represents a major tool of the mobility policy of European Regions.
  8. Also, regional authorities should encourage employers in both the public and private sectors to provide more opportunities for paid internships, apprenticeships, and other forms of work engagement. In this context it is important that the regions recognise the significance of small enterprises, which carry out a lot of “training” informally. Regions should consider whether the training and workplace learning needs of small and very small enterprises are being adequately understood and monitored and seek ways to improve or augment such training.
  9. Internships, traineeship and apprenticeship can be successful means to reduce the youth unemployment rate. However, regions should take steps to ensure that these schemes are not abused and that trainees receive appropriate training by defining the rights of trainees, apprentices and interns. They have to confirm that precarious conditions are avoided, and that there are clearly defined conditions for internships (in respect of internship duration, remuneration, and full social protection), and clear indications of expected skills to be acquired.
  10. Although internships might facilitate the labour market entry for some young professionals, there is the risk that they are used to serve as substitutes for regular job positions. Regions have to make sure that employers do not use apprentices to replace regular employees. Also, regions have to pay attention that young people participating in such schemes do not become locked into a pattern of recurrent short term unpaid work placements.

 

  • Eco-innovation: a pool for employment in the territories

 

In the context of the current crisis, the declining industrial base of many European regions, the difficulty to create jobs through innovation and the difficult access to finance faced by enterprises, in particular SMEs, are not an unchangeable fate.

The green economy has the potential to restructure our industry towards future-oriented sectors and foster employment in Europe. These are undeniable challenges but regions, strongly aware of territorial realities and close to economic actors, can take them up. Eco-innovation is a fully-fledged example of the regions’ capacity to adapt to policies and global challenges. Still, they need the resources required. In that context, Regions underline the need to :

  1. Invest significantly in a cluster policy that is tailored according to the territorial capital of the different regions and focusing, depending on the different stakeholders present in the territory. Only regions have sufficient knowledge of the area as well as a critical size to act as a relay and evaluate the suitability of one action or another in accordance with a region’s territorial identity. This cluster policy must aim at enhancing the links between research, innovation and market. It can only be successful if the triple helix model is applied, thereby involving the local and regional universities.
  2. Improve SMEs’ access to applied and fundamental research, through an increased cooperation between SMEs and bigger corporations, cluster policy. Easing the participation of SMEs to European projects in the framework of Horizon 2020 via simplification measures is also a way to streamline the link between SMEs and the academic sphere.
  3. Promote new financial instruments to encourage the financial institutions to support SMEs that invest into the greening of their activities or create eco-innovative products. Those projects create less immediate profitability but prove more sustainable than traditional economic activities: there is therefore a lack of appropriate mechanisms to support those investments.
  4. Provide targeted funding opportunities for regions at European level, and therefore retaining and strengthening a regional programme in Horizon 2020. Cohesion policy alone cannot support all regional investments in green economy: Horizon 2020, aiming for excellence, should be designed in a way to better support triple helix players at territorial level.
  5. Foster interregional cooperation and partnership in European regions. In order to innovate and set up ambitious eco-innovation strategies, experience-sharing, mutual learning, peer reviews, benchmarking are central instruments. In difficult times for regional budgets and finances, regional governments should not underestimate the added-value of interregional and international partnerships.

 

 

  • Small businesses –being small is not necessarily a liability

 

Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) are at the backbone of European economy: SMEs represent 99% of EU companies and provide 67% of all jobs.[1] Yet, uncertainties about the economic outlook, high international raw materials and energy prices and on-going difficulties in access to finance, threaten their survival.

With their tailored strategies, regions answer specific needs of SMEs within their territories that are otherwise not sufficiently addressed at the European or national levels. While national recovery plans mainly target large companies and the financial system, regions focus on the real economy. In fact, by supporting entrepreneurship and SMEs and by boosting their innovation capacity, regional actions can contribute to to strengthen regional economies and safeguard jobs.

The Assembly of European Regions and its members are following closely the implementation of the Small Business Act for Europe, and the development of the COSME and HORIZON 2020 programme and underline the need to: :

  1. Promote entrepreneurship by supporting an entrepreneurial spirit and providing concrete information, training and coaching for business starters and entrepreneurs in specific situations such as business take-overs, innovation or financial difficulties. In this context focus should not only be on innovative, technology oriented or knowledge based businesses but all types of viable company creations should be encouraged.
  2. Improve the environment for SMEs by reducing regulatory and bureaucratic burden in order to facilitate processes such as company creation or transfer, taxation, accounting or recruitment of employees.
  3. Facilitate access of SMEs to international markets and public procurement and provide alternatives to traditional loan financing, offering guarantees and tailor small loans for micro enterprises. In this context regions can play a role in helping SMEs in trouble to find solutions by offering mediation activities with the involved stakeholders.
  4. Improving SME’s access to European funding by cutting red tape and streamlining regulations in order to seize the full potential of SME’s involvement in COSME and HORIZON 2020, but also by making make it easier for Managing Authorities of Structural Funds to give support to SMEs.

 

  • Demographic change and culture: two sectors with growth potential

 

The future of European health systems depends on the degree to which regions can change mindsets, foster innovation and introduce new procedures or models. European policy and funding programmes should support regions to make these changes, be it at organisational level or by supporting the deployment of ICT. In this context, Regions make the following recommendations:

 

  1. The successor to the current European Public Health Programme should be entitled “More Health for Sustainable Growth” to demonstrate that quality services accessible to all citizens contribute to social cohesion and thereby to Europe’s economic recovery and sustainable growth. It should be clearly stated that cutting investment in health will hinder sustainable economic recovery to some extent. This programme should expressly acknowledge and target regions as key actors in shaping future health.
  2. The EU should complement AER’s actions to inform regions about the potential for health-related investment in the future EU Cohesion Policy and to encourage regions and member states to include health as a spending priority in the future Operating Programmes.
  3. The EU should support AER in implementing a leadership programme targeting regional decision-makers and looking at how to introduce innovation and change management in health. Europe needs open-minded individuals who are prepared to transcend the traditional boundaries of the health sector and implement innovative public procurement models, work with SMEs to develop new tools and services and introduce change.

 

AER welcomes the fact that the European Commission seems to have identified culture as a sector worth investing into with the proposed culture programme for the period 2014-2020 “Creative Europe” seeing its budget increase by 37% compared to current spending level. AER would like to remind all political leaders that the cultural and creative sector represents 4,5% of EU GDP and 3,8% of EU workforce with higher than average growth rates than other sectors. These rates could be even higher if we really started considering culture as a sector with high return potential. In this context, Regions make the following recommendations:

 

  1. Cultural and creative industries need to be supported but tend to be more and more identified as the tree of economic profitability hiding a forest of cultural bodies living from grants and subsidies with no return whatsoever. This vision of the sector is outdated. All types of activities within the cultural sector can be profitable. Cultural heritage protection can help boost tourism in a region; a thriving cultural life will help a region attract multi-national companies which need to offer a good quality of life for their employees; a respected cultural scene will increase the soft power of a region. The European Commission must take the diversity of the cultural opportunities into account.
  2. AER and the European Commission to work together to help deliver this message to European regions. A study to evaluate the return potential of the sector as a whole, must be jointly organised.
  3. AER and the European Commission to help regions accompany their cultural sector in order to make the most of all economic growth opportunities.

 

Conclusions

Europe is at a crossroads: If we do not make reforms in a series of key areas, then the European Union, and Europe in general, will suffer;

The expertise gathered at AER proves it : The Regions, through their projects and strategies, are already helping to deliver solutions in response to the crisis in many of the various sectors requiring reform.

There are therefore no major challenges that the European Union can tackle without the help of the Regions. But Regions cannot act on their own. They need the support of national governments and European institutions in the setting up of their growth policies, in the spirit of multilevel governance.

In this context, European Regions reiterate their attachment to cohesion policy, which they consider as the main tool to achieve the objectives of an inclusive, intelligent and sustainable growth. Lastly, rather than a “democratic federation of nation states”, Regions call for a change in political culture, and for the respect of the principles of subsidiarity and partnership which would allow them to fully play their role of key actors in the revival of the European Union and of Europe in general.

[1] http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/12/395

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AER conference “Faced with the crisis: The Regions at Europe’s bedside”

22 September, 2012 By Editor

Whereas the debt and Eurozone crisis is not yet solved, discussions about the future EU budget will enter into a new phase at the EU summit (18-19 October). The AER Crisis Summit (21-22 September, Abruzzo (I)) was the opportunity for Regions to provide their input to this debate. To what extent education and training contribute to regional development? How can eco-innovation become a pool for employment? How can Regions help their SMEs to develop? What is the link between demographic change, culture and economic recovery? Find the answer to all these questions in the Pescara Resolution. The Pescara Summit was attended by the President of the EESC, the Vice President of the CoR, by MEPs and representatives of the EC, by private stakeholders as well as by representatives from European Regions.

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Get inspired – YES! Youth entrepreneurship strategies at their best

10 February, 2012 By Mathieu Mori

Pori (FIN), 10 February 2012

A hundred participants gathered yesterday in Pori (FIN) in the framework of the Youth Entrepreneurship Strategies (YES) project* with a common goal: promote entrepreneurship education (EE) in schools. They dedicated the day to exchanging best practices on EE activities and strategies.

With youth unemployment in the EU averaging just below 24 % with a peak in Spain at over 46 %, YES partners consider EE not only as an excellent mean to harness pupils and students for working life but for life generally. Indeed, EE, on top of increasing awareness on entrepreneurship contributes to their personal development. EE promotes self-confidence, leadership and team working skills, critical thinking and risk taking behaviour or, as specialists put it, the “2020 superskills”.

Keynote speaker Aaron Michelin, CEO of Enersense Ltd. underlined “the need to acquire experience in risk management, and perhaps even more, in admitting failures”.

During the workshops, the eight project partners* reaped the benefit from extensive research and mapping work that had been carried out during past months and showcased some of their initiatives. These initiatives all contribute to implementing the European Union’s Oslo Agenda for entrepreneurship education at regional level.

The region of Murcia (E) for instance presented its Regional Entrepreneurship Plan “Plan Emprendemos” which promotes entrepreneurship and an entrepreneurial culture and supports intraregional networking. These three components break down into 35 different activities, and to mention but two of them: the EJE & EME (Young Enterprise Europe and An Enterprise in my School) Projects and the Imagina (Imagine a different Company) Contest.

In the remaining months of the project, the YES partners will concentrate on drawing the conclusions from the regional mapping and on developing policy recommendations and regional action plans. The results will be presented in a final conference to take place at the end of 2012.

* YES is a three-year INTERREG IVC project running until 31 December 2012 and bringing together 8 partners: The regions of Östergötland (S), Opole (PL), Zilina (SK), Murcia (E) and South East (IRL) as well as Pori Regional Development Agency (FIN), Junior Achievement Estonia and the Assembly of European Regions


The Assembly of European Regions (AER – aer.eu) is the largest independent network of regions in wider Europe. Bringing together more than 250 regions from 35 countries and 16 interregional organisations, AER is the political voice of its members and a forum for interregional co-operation.

   


For more information: [email protected]

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A resounding “YES” to youth employment!

31 January, 2012 By Mathieu Mori

AER Peer Review: Third stop in Krapina Zagorje

Krapina Zagorje (HR), 31 January 2012

Only a week after Croats said YES to EU membership, the Croatian County of Krapina Zagorje was the host of an AER Peer Review on youth employment, organised in the framework of the “Promoting Youth Employment” (PYE) project. Experts from abroad, young people and local stakeholders have gathered in order to discuss and analyse the current situation of youth on the regional labour market. As a result of the five-day event, the experts will create a tailor-made list of recommendations on how to improve the existing employment opportunities for youth and how to create new ones.

Young people aged 15-29 account for one fourth of the region’s population. The latest statistics (December 2011) indicate that the youth unemployment rate in Krapina Zagorje remains stable at 34.5%, only slightly higher than Croatia’s national average of 33.1%. Yet, the same statistical figures show that there is a lot at stake: the groups mostly affected by unemployment in Krapina Zagorje are aged 20-24 (46.7%) and 25-29 (34.4%).

The region has worked at improving young people’s employability, mainly by investing in their competences, as these are considered essential for a more effective transition from education to employment. When designing its youth employment policy, the County Council has consulted youth representatives, local employers’ associations and other relevant stakeholders. Some of the county’s initiatives include:

• Homer Project: Launched in 2009 by the Krapina Zagorje County Council, the project has led to the implementation of four training courses targeting pupils in secondary schools and corresponding to the region’s distinct labour market needs.
• Partnership for Development: Supported by the EU, the Partnership was set up to track types of jobs for which there is a lack of skilled trained workers. School curricula are then designed to fill in these skills gaps in the labour market and unemployed young people are enrolled in these programmes.
• County Youth Action Plan: Initiated and designed by young people, the Plan draws on the willingness of the Krapina Zagorje County Council to actively involve youth in matters that directly affect them. Targeting young people aged 15 to 29, the Plan emphasizes the importance of including youth in a wide array of policies, related, inter alia, to education and new skills, employment and entrepreneurship, social protection or active participation. Launched in 2006, it has been revised and now includes new chapters important for youth, such as democracy, the European Union and non-violence.

Siniša Hajdas Doncic, Krapina Zagorje County Prefect: “With its policies and concrete programmes and activities, Krapina Zagorje makes the greatest possible effort to ensure the quality of life and work of the young generation. We strongly support education and we provide high school and student scholarships. Our County has been a partner in several EU co-funded projects that aim at supporting employability, and our development strategy takes care of young people in almost all its elements. As a sign of our will to concretely help young people and offer them vocational training and first work experience, our County also hires interns every year”.

The AER peer review visit organised in the context of PYE will help the region prepare and implement its first youth employment action plan. Its outcome will be presented to the wider public during the PYE Final Conference which will be held on 23 May 2012 in Brussels (B).

This press release is supported by the Community Programme
for Employment and Social Solidarity – PROGRESS (2007-2013).

 

The Assembly of European Regions (AER – aer.eu) is the largest independent network of regions in wider Europe. Bringing together more than 250 regions from 35 countries and 16 interregional organisations, AER is the political voice of its members and a forum for interregional co-operation. 

For more information: [email protected]

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AER Is Pleased to Present Its 2011 Winners in the Fields of Innovation and Youth Policy

25 November, 2011 By Editor


Ponta Delgada, Açores (P), 25 November 2011

The best Regional Innovation Project
This year’s winner is the Polish Region of Wielkopolska for its project “Promoter of Innovation”. Launched in January 2009, in cooperation with the Poznan Academy for the Promotion of Entrepreneurship, this project aims at providing capital, legal advice, technical know-how and other services to facilitate the development of knowledge-based SMEs. These invaluable services are offered to students, recent graduates and the Poznan University of Technology staff members aged between 18 and 35.

So far the project has supported 21 companies and 45 business ideas out of which ¾ could not have survived without the legal and corporate consulting services provided by the Promoter. In the years to come this ingenious youth business and entrepreneurship initiative will continue to make Wielkopolska a highly competitive and innovative region in Europe.“Promoter of Innovation is an outstanding regional project to support entrepreneurship and new business concepts. The Pre-incubator takes full charge of the pre-incubated person’s clients during their operations in the early seed phase when the entrepreneur needs to concentrate on their business. That is truly an innovative approach, and it obviously works!” underlined Mr. Joachim Hafkesbrink, member of the jury.

AER Most Youth Friendly European Region (MYFER) 2011
The theme of this year’s MYFER competition, “Social Inclusion of Youth with Disabilities” was chosen by the AER Youth Regional Network members to acknowledge the important work undertaken by European regions to facilitate better inclusion of young people with disabilities. The regions were invited to present their policies and projects in this area in three main fields: education, employment and civic engagement.

The jury was particularly convinced by the projects presented by the Spanish Region of Catalunya, which has developed a coordinated and comprehensive policy designed to support the 38 997 young Catalans with disabilities. A coordinated approach between a number of regional departments, ranging from Catalunya’s Department of Social Welfare and Family to various ministries (education, employment), and together with a wide range of stakeholders, the policy includes different thematic projects targeting a better social integration of young people with disabilities: ”Assistance to independent living at home”, “Zoom Culture” (“Apropa Cultura”), or “University and Disability in Catalunya”.

The jury also awarded Dolnoslaskie (PL) with the 2011 MYFER Special Prize in recognition of the political will of the region to help youth with disabilities get into formal education systems, and the inscription of this aim in the “Development Strategy of the Lower Silesia Region by 2020”. Thanks to several projects and activities implemented since September 2007, like “Integration from kindergarten”, “the Social Scholarships of the Marshall of Lower Silesia”, or “Together fully able-bodied”, young people with disabilities are now receiving support during their studies, while teachers and lecturers are trained on how to work better with youth with disabilities.

For more information: [email protected]

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Youth Unemployment: New AER’s Peer Review at the Açores

21 November, 2011 By Editor


Ponta Delgada, Açores (P), 21 November 2011

This week the Autonomous Region of the Açores and its regional Directorate on Youth are hosting the Assembly of European Regions’ Peer Review on youth employment, organised in the framework of the twelve-month Promoting Youth Employment (PYE) project. The Açores is the second, out of 4 partner regions (Vojvodina-SRB, Krapina Zagorje-HR, Hampshire-UK) to hold a PYE peer review visit.

The latest data shows that youth unemployment rate in the European Union reaches 21,4%, its worst level since February 2010.“We are convinced that with political will we can do a lot to tackle youth unemployment at the regional level. The Açores count 36 184 young people with a total population of 246 102: we hope that our involvement in the PYE project will help us improve young people’s prospects on the labour market, as well as facilitate social dialogue about the importance of employment policies in the EU context.” said Eng. Bruno Pacheco, Regional Director for Youth of the Açores.

Investing in skills
According to Dr. Rui Bettencourt, Regional Director for Employment, Vocational Training and Consumer Protection of the Açores, improving the level of professional qualifications is the priority for the region: “Investing in vocational education and training is a must if we want to attract private investors and secure quality jobs for youth. The fact that 90% of the unemployed youth in the Açores succeed in finding a job in less than twelve months shows the efficiency of the professional training schemes already implemented in our region”.

In order to boost the job market and provide professional training to all, the Açores set up a range of activities, detailed in the regional Youth Employment Strategy, such as:
• Integrated Plan of Traineeships: paid traineeships for 17-30 year-olds who are unemployed or seeking a first work experience.
• Employment Cradle: subsidies for the unemployed youth replacing employees on maternity leave. The Programme is co-financed by the Regional Employment’s Fund.
• Social Labour Market: increasing the employability of people with disabilities (including youth) through subsidising work contracts and making technical adjustments to the work place.

Irrespective of these activities, the region recognises an urgent need to better anticipate and match skills gained through professional training and higher education, with the labour market needs as well as to reduce the alarming number of early school droop-outs.

In order to help the Açores address these challenges, the team of international experts will be interviewing this week a range of regional stakeholders, representatives from the educational institutions and young people participating in regional employment programmes.

Moreover, in order to come up with very concrete policy recommendations, our experts will go on field visits to the Hospitality and Tourism School, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Ponta Delgada, the Center for Entrepreneurship at the University of the Açores and the Employment Cradle project premises, to mention but a few.

 

       

 

Background:
Gathering four European regions and the Assembly of European Regions (AER) as a lead partner, Promoting Youth Employment (PYE) is a one-year project funded by the European Union, aiming at improving regional policies and strategies related to youth employment by the exchange of good practices and tailor-made lists of recommendations. Two more peer review visits will have been organised by the 23rd of May 2012, when the closing conference will be held in Brussels. This event will be the opportunity to present the concrete project outputs: Four Regional Action Plans for regional and local governments.

For more information: [email protected]

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Wielkopolska (PL) wins the AER Innovation Award

27 October, 2011 By Editor

AER regional innovation award

Aim of the project

The Pre-incubator of Innovation aims to sponsor youth business and entrepreneurship, with particular attention to recent university graduates. The project provides capital, legal advice, technical know-how, and other
services to «pre-incubate» fledgling small businesses.

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