Young people are particularly vulnerable to fluctuations in economic trends. Youth employment is
therefore high on the policy agenda of those concerned with promoting social inclusion. While
youth-targeted employment policies tend to combine both demand-side and supply-side approaches, it
is important to recognise that traditional notions of "work" have more recently been challenged and
reconceptualised. The old assumptions about gender roles, "job security" and "planned careers" have
thus been transformed by the profound economic and social changes of recent decades.
The essays collected here were developed from papers first delivered at a research seminar on
youth employment organised by the partnership between the Council of Europe and the European
Commission in the field of youth. They represent a diverse and, at times, provocative collection of
analytic snapshots of the position of young people on the European labour market. What emerges is a
shared commitment to finding flexible responses to economic globalisation and a concomitant concern
for promoting the rights, interests and welfare of young people in both training placement and in
the workplace.
Starting from concrete examples and analysing some Countries' situations, the work discusses
the main challenges of youth employment, mobility, marginalisation, participation.
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