|
European youth and student organisations are concerned after poverty and education targets seem to have been dropped from the European Union's discussion on the 'Europe 2020 Strategy for sustainable growth and jobs' and urge EU leaders to include these targets back when the European Council meets again to discuss the Strategy in June.
"We are worried to see important benchmarks for more quality education and the fight against poverty left out," says Tine Radinja, President of the European Youth Forum. "Without concrete targets in these fields, a sustainable growth and jobs strategy is of little use to make Europe smarter and more inclusive."
The European Commission initially proposed that 'the share of early school leavers should be under 10% and at least 40% of the younger generation should have a tertiary degree'. But before and during the EU Council of Ministers' meeting on March 25 and 26, news came out (EurActiv) that several countries are opposing benchmarks on education and poverty. "We are demanding more Europe and more European consensus on ambitious goals. Otherwise, we will end up by having almost no reference to education and poverty targets in this Strategy," added Mr Radinja.
press@youthforum.org This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , +32 2 286 94 17 (European Youth Forum)
Olav Øye, olav@esu-online.org This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , +32 495 10 18 79 (ESU)
Tajana Nikolic, external@esn.org This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , +32 2 256 74 27 (ESN)
Viviana Galli, viviana@obessu.org This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , +32 2 647 23 90 (OBESSU)
Agnes Leyrer, agnes.leyrer@aegee.org This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , +32 487 10 71 95 (AEGEE-Europe)
See also:
- European Youth Forum calls on the Informal European Council to include a Youth dimension in the EU 2020 strategy (YFJ)
- An EU 2020 strategy without education targets is unthinkable (ESU)
About the organisations:
The European Youth Forum (YFJ) is an independent, democratic, youth-led platform made up of 99 National Youth Councils and international youth NGOs from across Europe, that works to empower young people to participate actively in society to improve their own lives, by representing and advocating their needs and interests and those of their organisations towards the European Union, the Council of Europe and the United Nations. For more information, visit www.youthforum.org
The European Students' Union (ESU) is an umbrella organisation of 45 National Unions of Students (NUS) from 37 countries. The aim of ESU is to represent and promote the educational, social, economic and cultural interests of students at the European level.
The Erasmus Student Network (ESN) is a non-for-profit international student organisation, with 347 local sections in 33 countries supporting and developing student exchange. The mission of ESN is to represent international students, thus provide opportunities for cultural understanding and self-development under the principle of Students Helping Students.
The Organising Bureau of European School Student Unions (OBESSU) is a platform for cooperation between the national school student unions active in general secondary and secondary vocational education in Europe. Founded in 1975 in Dublin, it brings together member and observer organisations from more than 20 European countries. All member-organisations are independent, national, representative and democratic school student organisations. More information on www.obessu.org
AEGEE (Association des Etats Généraux des Etudiants de l’Europe / European Students’ Forum) is a student organisation that promotes co-operation, communication and integration amongst young people in Europe. As a non-governmental, politically independent and non-profit organisation AEGEE is open to students and young professionals from all faculties and disciplines – today it counts 15.000 members, active in more than 230 university cities in 42 European countries, making it the biggest interdisciplinary student association in Europe.
Source: www.esib.org |