Connecting the dots: Young People, Social Inclusion and Digitalisation

The 2018 Symposium of the EU-CoE youth partnership focused on exploring the intersection between social inclusion of young people and digitalisation, reflecting especially on how digitalisation affects young people’s lives, and what the role of youth policy, youth work and youth research can be in this respect.

Firstly, the Symposium was articulated around young people’s lives, experiences and how digitalisation has an impact on them, especially in relation to young people’s social inclusion.

The thematic focus of the Symposium was on how social inclusion of young people is or can be affected by digitalisation on questions such as:

Access to services, youth-friendly services, services for social inclusion;
Reaching out to young people and the digital divide;
Resilience and empowerment for social inclusion;
Discrimination in the digital space, hate speech, cyber-bullying and harassment.
Secondly, the Symposium also explored some possible ways ahead for the youth sector, looking in particular at

YOUTH WORK: smart youth work (including digital youth work), competences needed from practitioners; the role of youth work in developing young people’s media literacy; using digitalisation for youth empowerment;
YOUTH POLICY: the role of youth policy in taking up the theme of digitalisation as part of different programmes aimed at curbing inequality, using new channels to reach out and involve young people (for example, through gaming or apps), acting as a regulator or as a support; and the role of digitalisation in shaping youth policy in all its phases;
YOUTH RESEARCH: the role of youth research, identifying further areas of research and the use of data-driven developments for research.
The Symposium also marked the celebration of the 20th anniversary of the EU-CoE youth partnership, and was organised in cooperation with the Youth Affairs Department of the Ministry of Education and Research of Estonia.

Participants

The Symposium gathered 120 youth policy makers, researchers, practitioners from youth NGOs and youth work from across the signatory states of the European Cultural Convention, as well as actors from the digital field, that, through their work, combat inequalities.

Complete information, here.

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