Nico, Magda (2013), "Generational Changes, Gaps and Conflicts: a view from the south", Perspectives on Youth: European Youth Partnership Series, 1st Issue “2020- what do we see?”, Council of Europe and the European Commission Publication, Luxembourg (original) (raw)

Youth prospects in a time of economic recession

Demographic Research, 2013

The paper gives an update to earlier analysis considering youth poverty and transition to adulthood, which is timely given the economic crisis engulfing many countries in Europe. Whereas the crisis is affecting young people in particular, there is also a certain degree of variation across Europe.

Experiencing precariousness in European cities: the young between risks and opportunities in times of crisis

Young generations excluded from labour market participation, stuck in precarious jobs or in long-term unemployment, or even in inactivity (the NEET phenomenon), have come to represent one of the main concerns in European countries. The waste of young generations' potential indeed threatens the sustainability of the European social model, and its objective to keep together competitiveness and social cohesion. The current crisis exacerbates these risks, and may also increase the distance in the degree to which these emerge in different countries and cities. As a matter of fact, the growing relevance of local levels in welfare provision (but also in industrial relations), and the way this combines with national regulations, makes the comparative overview of social protection more complex, and only partly corresponding to the taxonomies based on national welfare models.

Youth poverty in Europe

2000

This research examines poverty among young people aged 16 to 29, across 13 countries of the pre-enlargement European Union. Although young adulthood is known to be a time of uncertainty and vulnerability, there has been little research into the incidence of poverty among young people. This report aims to fi ll this knowledge gap.

Youth in a Time of Crisis

Printing Preparation and Printing: Smjerokaz 2000 d.o.o. © Friedrich Ebert Stiftung © Institut za društvena istraživanja ISBN 978-953-6218-51-6 (IDIZ) ISBN 978-953-7043-44-5 (FES)

Youth vulnerability in Europe during the Great Recession

The paper gives an update to earlier analysis considering youth poverty and transition to adulthood, which is timely given the economic crisis engulfing many countries in Europe. Whereas, the crisis is affecting young people in particular, there is also huge variation across Europe. We document the short-term consequences of the current recession on the transition to adulthood of young Europeans, focusing on two main cornerstones in the transition to adulthood: economic independence and residential autonomy. We show an almost universal increase in financial hardship experienced by young adults during the recession, which is starting to translate into higher rates of co-residence with parents, hence delaying the process of leaving home and gaining economic independence. The economic recession will have a huge impact on young people and their the transition to adulthood.Economic deprivation and uncertainty will most likely delay the key markers of transition to adulthood.

The Impact of the Economic Crisis on Youth Trajectories: A Case Study from Southern Europe

This article analyzes the impact of the economic crisis on the patterns of transition followed by Catalan young people. In particular, it does so by examining to what extent the crisis has affected the extension, de-linearization, reversibility and diversification of their trajectories. These processes have been detected at the European level and are often linked to a context of greater opportunities. The article focuses on Catalonia, an example of a familistic youth regime. Results show that, in a context of crisis and for the Catalan case, transitions take longer, linearity and reversibility increase and, although vulnerability rises, the typical trajectories remain stable. Thus, risk avoidance, mostly through family support, has become even a more dominant strategy than during the expansive economic period. This reinforcement of the traditional pattern of transition, in which the family of origin has a central role, is expected to strengthen social reproduction.