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Youth participation is more than a luxury

    Opinion
  • Friday, May 28, 2010
  • | CYP Now
Youth participation has become a core element of the youth sector over the past five years. But, in the five years ahead, there is likely to be a shift from providing positive activities, where it is relatively easy to build youth participation into schemes, to offering employability programmes.

Protect the youth opportunity fund

    Opinion
  • Monday, June 14, 2010
  • | CYP Now
As CYP Now predicted last week, the Department for Education has removed the ringfence around the remaining 40.8m of the youth opportunity fund. The ringfence guaranteed that money went to local grant-making youth panels to spend on projects requested by local young people.

Keep a young hand on purse strings

    Opinion
  • Wednesday, June 30, 2010
  • | CYP Now
An impressive 2.5 million young people benefited from the youth opportunity and youth capital funds between 2006 and 2009, according to data compiled by the previous government.

Innovation and funding in services for children and young people

    Opinion
  • Monday, July 5, 2010
  • | CYP Now
She may be talking about the specifics of ChildLine's merger with the NSPCC, but Esther Rantzen makes some salient points about funding and activity in the youth and children's sector. I have held similar views for some time. Perhaps we need a wider and longer view.

Youth work needs fresh young talent

    Opinion
  • Monday, September 27, 2010
  • | CYP Now
It's easy to become consumed by your own job prospects in difficult economic times. But spare a thought for those looking to get a foot on the career ladder.

Big society could hit small charities hard

    Opinion
  • Wednesday, September 1, 2010
  • | CYP Now
Will small and medium-sized youth charities be among the biggest losers of the coalition government? It seems an odd question to ask given the now youth minister Tim Loughton's comments before the election that he would make it a personal priority to find new ways of supporting the voluntary youth sector.

From the Frontline - Uniforms allow the person to shine through

    Opinion
  • Monday, September 15, 2008
  • | CYP Now
Very few youth organisations nowadays require young people to wear uniforms. Organisations such as ourselves (St John Ambulance), the Scouts, the Guides and a handful of others stand apart because we believe there are benefits in young people dressing the same. But does this policy encourage people to join or does it achieve the opposite?

Don't rule out single-faith projects

Successfully reaching out to young people from minority groups is something that concerns all providers of youth services - both statutory and voluntary.

Jobs famine deepens the generational rift

    Opinion
  • Monday, November 14, 2011
  • | CYP Now
Just as youth unemployment hits a record high, fanning fears that Britain's young people could become a "lost generation", the government has scrapped the default retirement age. So more older people are now competing for fewer jobs with the rest of the workforce.

England is out of kilter on youth policy

    Opinion
  • Tuesday, January 2, 2018
  • | CYP Now
At the end of last year, Tracey Crouch, England's youth minister, announced the shelving of plans for a new three-year youth policy statement, despite this being promised by her predecessor a year ago. The argument was that a broader civil society strategy was needed instead, one that embraced much more than youth work and youth policy.

Youth workers in hospital fill a void

    Opinion
  • Thursday, March 5, 2009
  • | CYP Now
I've become rather hardened to youth work projects. After writing about the youth sector for more than six years, it takes a lot for a project to really stand out from the crowd.

Embarrassing custody rates require creative solutions

    Opinion
  • Monday, July 25, 2011
  • | CYP Now
The high number of young people held in youth custody in England and Wales has been a cause of national embarrassment. The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has quite rightly raised concerns at the levels of young people held in our youth jails in its recent reports. Despite impressive reductions in recent years, more than 2,000 under-18s were in custody in May.

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