Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan: Driving forces for the security of medical radioisotopes supply

Document Type
AS

Industries and technologies supporting a water-resilient society

Document Type
AS

European defence industrial strategy

Document Type
AS
Adopted on 18/09/2024
Reference
SOC/810-EESC-2024
Workers - GR II
Lithuania
Plenary session number
590
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The EESC supports fostering joint programmes among higher education institutions within and beyond European University Alliance projects, ensuring quality assurance and including all relevant stakeholders in their implementation. It emphasises the need for broad collaboration among stakeholders to effectively implement the initiatives, particularly highlighting the fundamental values of student and staff participation following the Bologna Process. The EESC calls for the involvement of relevant labour market stakeholders in defining study programmes that have particular relevance to the labour market. It emphasises the need for adequate resources to implement these initiatives effectively.

  • Record of proceedings
Download — EESC opinion: A joint European degree
Proposals for the next parliamentary term
Event type
Debate

The Capital Markets Union (CMU) is an initiative that was launched in 2014 with the aim of creating a single market for capital in the EU. Today, despite concerted efforts towards more integrated capital markets, such as the 2015 and 2020 Action Plans, the CMU remains incomplete.  Yet, recent developments offer hope for renewed momentum. The statement of the Eurogroup in inclusive format on the future of the CMU, and the report "Much more than a market", by Enrico Letta, outline fresh proposals on how to further integrate financial markets in the EU and stimulate investment. Against this backdrop, this public debate will convene institutional actors and civil society stakeholders to take stock of current developments  and discuss policy solutions for the upcoming parliamentary term. 

On 24 April, the EESC hosted a screening of the Ukrainian documentary "20 Days in Mariupol" which this year won the Oscar in the category of Best Documentary Feature Film.

On 24 April, the EESC hosted a screening of the Ukrainian documentary "20 Days in Mariupol" which this year won the Oscar in the category of Best Documentary Feature Film.

The film follows its director, journalist Mstyslav Chernov, and his colleagues during 20 dramatic days in February and March 2022, when they documented Russia's brutal siege of Mariupol, a major Ukrainian port on the Azov Sea. Working for the Associated Press, Chernov and his team were the last foreign journalists to stay in the city before it was seized by the Russian army. Their poignant recordings and photos, including those of massive bombardments of a maternity hospital and of the city theatre which served as a shelter for children, travelled the world, bearing witness to the horrors inflicted by the invading Russian army on the Ukrainian civilian population.

Apart from the Academy Award, "20 days in Mariupol" also won many other prestigious awards, including the BAFTA Film Award for the Best Documentary and the Audience Award for the World Cinema – Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. 

The screening was attended by EESC president Oliver Röpke, as well as by distinguished guests including H.E. Vsevolod Chentsov, Head of the Mission of Ukraine to the EU, and Yevhen Tuzov, one of the documentary's main protagonists.

"We must remember our solemn duty to bear witness to history. This movie has a clear message: we have to show the world what hate can do. Let us not forget the sacrifices made by the people of Ukraine, nor the resilience they have shown in the face of adversity. The prospect of Ukraine becoming an EU Member State is not only a testament to our shared values, but also a beacon of hope for a brighter future," said EESC president Oliver Röpke

"20 Days in Mariupol' offers a gruesome but essential look at the suffering caused by Russia's aggression. I am proud to say that our committee has remained unwaveringly at the side of Ukraine, and of its vibrant civil society, in these difficult times, and your presence tonight means a lot," said EESC Vice President for Communication Laurentiu Plosceanu

The EESC has firmly stood by Ukraine and its civil society from the first day of the Russia's war of aggression and reinforced its cooperation with Ukrainian civil society organisations (CSOs) through the EU-Ukraine Civil Society platform. It created the Ukraine hub, offering Ukrainian CSOs in Belgium a working space. It started the Enlargement Candidate Members initiative, to share the EESC expertise with Ukrainian CSOs. A high-level EESC delegation, led by Mr Röpke, visited Ukraine in November where it met with Economy Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko, representatives of the Verokhna Rada and of civil society. EESC members paid respect to Ukrainian war victims at war memorials in the country. 

The screening, organised at the initiative of the EESC Latvian member Andris Gobiņš, once again showed the solidarity of Europe's civil society with Ukraine and its people. The audience also had the opportunity to see a photo exhibition dedicated to Mariupol under siege, organised in cooperation with the Ukra-Bel association, which was displayed alongside the main event. (dp)

We sat down with the rapporteur of the EESC opinion on EU-UK youth engagement, Cillian Lohan, to ask him about the potential benefits of a youth mobility scheme, proposed by the European Commission and backed by the EESC. The scheme would make it easier for young UK and EU citizens to live, study and work in the EU or the UK, respectively. Now that the UK has rejected the proposed EU-wide deal on the free movement of young people, what are other possible approaches to restore the ties severed by Brexit?

We sat down with the rapporteur of the EESC opinion on EU-UK youth engagement, Cillian Lohan, to ask him about the potential benefits of a youth mobility scheme, proposed by the European Commission and backed by the EESC. The scheme would make it easier for young UK and EU citizens to live, study and work in the EU or the UK, respectively. Now that the has UK rejected the proposed EU-wide deal on the free movement of young people, what are other possible approaches to restore the ties severed by Brexit?