YOUTHopia! volume 1 | Page 19

Are we really ready for the recognition of youth work and non-formal education? During the last years, I have attended quite a few congresses and seminars. In many cases, although the setting is different, the challenges faced by young people are common. Among others, a very common answer that miraculously emerges as the remedy to all adversities is “the recognition of youth work”. I can’t help thinking how much the economic crisis has influenced the way young people view youth work. Unemployment has taken its toll on all of us and in times of challenge, people tend to search for solutions. Turning youth work into an established profession or recognizing non-formal education (by formal procedures, of course) illustrates as the answer to most problems. But is this truly the case? The more I travel and interact with people who are active in the youth field in different capacities, the more I realize that “youth work” is a notion that varies from person to person, from country to country. In Greece and Turkey, the countries I am most experienced in, “youthwork” does not exist as a word, however, I can say with confidence that we have many good practices and success stories to share with the rest of the world. To try to confine “youthwork” into a strict definition would be pointless and vain and perhaps would even take some of its magic away. Nevertheless, given the rapid and often dramatic changes in our lives caused by international developments, it would be useful to ask ourselves every now and when: why do we do youthwork? Youthwork aims at personal and social development. Tools and methodology may vary in each context, but the purpose is the same: to empower young people, so as to create autonomous and active citizens, with a critical mind and personal point of view, who will be productive members of their societies. Developing this kind of competences inevitably makes people very competitive in the professional field, nevertheless, getting a job should not be an end itself for young people engaging into youthwork. Now that the recognition of youthwork is so high in the European agenda, we should think about the implications of “professionalizing” youthwork and linking it directly to employability. I have seen young people participating in training courses with the sole purpose of getting a