Included or not included… that’s the question ! Input on inclusion and the possibilities of the Youth programme for young people with fewer opportunities Dirk De Vilder Outward Bound ® Belgium
Dec 23, 2015
Included or not included… that’s the question !
Input on inclusion and the possibilities of the Youth programme for young people with fewer
opportunities
Dirk De Vilder Outward Bound® Belgium
“It’s nice to hear that I am a young person with fewer
opportunities. Before I was socially
disadvantaged, vulnerable, delinquent, young person at
the edge, … Good to know but does this
gives me more possibilities???”
“Young people with fewer opportunities” are defined by the
obstacles they face in life
EducationalSocial
EconomicDisability
Health problemsCultural obstacles
Georgraphical
“ the problems young people face, especially in their transitions to adulthood and employment, have intensified in the
last two decades. Most young people have very ordinary ambitions to get a basic job,
with a regular average income and a family which they can support. These
relatively simple ambitions, however, are not within the reach of many, who end up
living precarious lives on the edge of society due to a mixture of exclusionary
processes.
But it is unhelpful to depict troubled – and sometimes troublesome – youth as a group with singular
characteristics. Some are temporarily sidetracked, others essentially confused and only a small minority deeply alienated
from mainstream society…”(Howard Williamson; keynote speech research seminar
‘social inclusion and young people’)
It’s not because you are part of ‘a group that faces obstacles’ that you are excluded
Different social analyses on social exclusion
Individual guilt model
Individual victim model
Collective victim model
Collective guilt model
Social vulnerability(Walgrave, Vettenburg)
“Some persons/groups become vulnerable by the social organization of a given society.
In contact with social institutions they don’t take profit or profit less from the social
services, education,…” (Walgrave)
“A accumulation of negative experiences in contact with social institutions leads towards a
negative social perspective” (Vettenburg)
Structural component
Relational component
• Experience of being different (language, rules, requests, …)
• Difference between the home culture and school culture
• They have to learn more, less stimulation
• Difficulty to adapt leads to negative perspective, stigmatization, bad results, ineffective social ties, ….
• Negative stereotypes by teachers
School as an institution that can lead towards negative social perspective“The school as a first experience of social vulnerability for young people”
Normal students develop a network of social ties throughout their schooling, but students who perform poorly or drop out fail to develop that rapport. According to the theory of social vulnerability, these latter students are more prone to juvenile delinquency because of the absence of significant social ties.
School as a part of the dominant culture becomes a excluding mechanism
Vicious circle of social exclusion
Born in a family with negative experiences with institutions
Negative social perspective
Bad social, economic situation
Different social attitudes, skills
Bad experiences at school
Negative self image
‘alternative value system’
More risks to get in contact with justice
bad employment
Structural problem
Not only an individual problem
Some groups are more vulnerable (stigmatisation)
Differences in culture
Te bigger the difference between the dominant culture and the culture of the group the bigger the risk of being excluded
Don’t see the other group as a deficient, but as a ‘variation’ of the dominant culture. Only this change in mentality will lead to real inclusion. (Vettenburg)
3. From exclusion towards integration
‘If I would know the answer, I would not be here’
Different problems requires different approach, solutions, actions,
Coaching attitude (ask, don’t tell)
Helping to build op a positive perspective, relation, social ties
Standard methods often don’t work
Understanding the box
Williamson went on to propose an empirical strategy for determining effective action to combat social exclusion at local, regional, or national levels. He uses the striking image of a ‘box’ in which many young are caught as a metaphor for social exclusion.The ‘box’ has permeable boundaries that young people may cross back and forth, into and out of exclusion, depending on circumstances and opportunities. Understanding the ‘box’ and what to do about it does not require an a priori definition of ‘social exclusion’, but demands that those involved work to create their own definition, and explore the social condition of particular groups of young people facing exclusion.
This can be done by addressing key questions, the answers to which indicate the nature of the solutions required
1. Who do you want to include ? Who are these young people? What are there experiences? What combination of causes drove young people to enter the ‘box’? What barriers could prevent young people entering the ‘box’? (prevention?)
2. Do they want to be included ? (by you)What are there needs? How can solutions be calibrated to these different needs? Are differentpreventative measures needed for different young people at different times?
3. Included for what ?
4. Youth programme
an opportunity for inclusion
or another institution that creates social vulnerability
food for thought
• why a European programme? Maslow!!Do they want, do they need it? What do they need? Did you ask?Do you want to set up a European project with young people with fewer opportunities ??
• Not an isolated event but embedded in a process
• How does the programme find these young people? How do these young people find the programme?Importance of multiplications, intermediates
• participation, how to build up an international project together with young people with fewer opportunities…‘nothing about us, without us’.
• How to Integrate the social context ?Parents, family, key persons, …
Non-formal education, an answer to the hurting mechanisms of formal educationImportance of ‘relation’ with, be in relation with, speak their language, know their ‘social context’,…
• differences in programmes according to different groups of possible excluded young people‘different answers for different questions’
Ex. Disabled young people together with non-disabledEx. Lesbian, gay together to speak safely about specific issues
• How to assure a minimum of obstacles for youth workers and young people with fewer opportunities for setting up projects or participate in projects ? Timing, administration, prefinancing, coaches to help with administration, …..
• Who has to do the job??inclusion in regular youth organisations or organisations working with excluded young people
consequences for training and support measuresOn what to train: specific topics, working with groups, process oriented youth training, personal development for youth workers working with these young people, basic training ??????