Students from 33 different countries will travel to Brussels in March 2020 to take part in a European Youth Summit on Climate. The event is organised by the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC), and will follow the model of a United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP).
Młodzież
Obowiązkowy program nauczania dotyczący polityki europejskiej, aby poszerzyć wiedzę obywateli przed wyborami, zdobył najwięcej głosów w tegorocznej edycji „Twoja Europa – Twoje Zdanie” (YEYS), wydarzeniu dla młodzieży zorganizowanym przez Europejski Komitet Ekonomiczno-Społeczny (EKES) w dniach 21–22 marca 2019 r. Ta propozycja, podobnie jak wybrane pozostałe trzy, skupiające się na wykorzystaniu nowych technologii i mediów społecznościowych w celu zwiększenia udziału w wyborach europejskich, zostaną przekazane Parlamentowi Europejskiemu do rozpatrzenia.
Better scrutiny and management of food waste, an internationally agreed European history curriculum to combat nationalism, and better knowledge of the EU via the creation of a European day for schools. These were the main recommendations made to policy-makers by the students who took part in Your Europe, Your Say! (YEYS) to overcome the challenges the EU is facing.
You are our present and future, and Europe needs you
: with these words, EESC Vice-President Gonçalo Lobo Xavier welcomed 99 young people to the yearly Your Europe, Your Say! event organised by the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC).
33 schools from across Europe to come to Brussels to discuss the future of the EU. Today the EESC selected the schools which will be participating in this year's edition of Your Europe Your Say!, its flagship event for youth. In 2017, the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome will be the theme of the Committee’s annual "Your Europe, Your Say!" youth event, offering young people from around Europe the opportunity to share their ideas about the EU of yesterday, today and tomorrow.
According to Eurostat figures, in May 2016 there were 4,197 million unemployed young people (18.6%) in the EU-28. Although an improvement on the previous year (20.3%), the figure remains appalling and shows that the threat of a "lost generation", which has loomed large since the beginning of the economic and financial crisis, is still hanging dangerously over Europe. Despite this, businesses across the EU are struggling to find young people with the skills they need.
33 schools from across Europe selected to come to Brussels to discuss migration