Networks for NEETS
Contents
Employment opportunities through social and peer networks.
Helping NEETs to increase their social capital – we report on findings from a European study in Italy, Spain and Portugal. Being not in education, employment or training (NEET) can be bad for your health and wellbeing. Studies have found that being NEET is associated with numerous negative consequences, both at an individual level but also at a societal level. At the individual level, young people who are NEET are more likely to have mental health issues, be socially excluded and exposed to discrimination and poverty. At a societal level, it results in additional costs for health and welfare payments and unused manpower. Even before the current Covid-19 crisis, large numbers of young people aged 20-34 were NEET – around 16.5% across Europe in 2018. The proportion was even higher in some countries; in Italy, for example, it was as much as 28.9%. The ongoing pandemic is likely to have exacerbated the situation. Recent statistics have, for example, shown that many young people have simply stopped looking for work. Many projects have tried to address this issue by helping young people to learn new skills or improve their employability skills. However, such strategies adopt a ‘deficit model’ – assuming that the problem lies with young people rather than the wider social and institutional context. The ongoing European project ComNetNEET – CNN has tried to adopt a different approach, by focussing on developing young people’s social capital. Social capital is, in this sense, understood as social and peer networks, that can be used to find employment opportunities. A recent study in the UK, for example, found that: ‘Young people’s social capital in the form of family, friends and other networks was exceptionally important in helping them out of their inactivity and into EET’. The CNN model, therefore, does not only focus on helping young people to improve their employability skills, via a mixture of individual and group-based coaching sessions tailored to their interests and needs but also aims at engaging local key stakeholders and community leaders to provide a more supportive network. Key to the model is also providing participants with firsthand experiences of the world of work to give them a better understanding of routes into employment and links with potential employers. Evaluation evidence collected as part of three pilots in Italy, Spain and Portugal conducted over the last year show promising evidence that this approach can really help young people.