{"id":6894,"date":"2012-05-16T07:33:37","date_gmt":"2012-05-16T05:33:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.zeus.aegee.org\/magazine\/?p=6894"},"modified":"2012-05-15T22:37:22","modified_gmt":"2012-05-15T20:37:22","slug":"erasmus-for-all","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.zeus.aegee.org\/magazine\/2012\/05\/16\/erasmus-for-all\/","title":{"rendered":"Erasmus for All?"},"content":{"rendered":"
On the 23rd<\/sup> of November 2011, the European Commission officially presented the proposal of \u201cErasmus for All\u201d (E4A), the new program that will replace our beloved \u201cYouth in Action\u201d for upcoming years 2014-2020, gathering the areas of Education, Culture, Sport and Youth in one same program.<\/p>\n As you might be aware, the current Youth in Action (which is the Program of EU Commission for 2007-2013) gives a<\/a> lot of importance to Non Formal Education (NFE), active citizenship and empowerment of young people to take ownership and develop their own projects, which will contribute to the big picture of European Integration. It allows young people to manage and implement their own projects and ideas, as well as supports youth organizations and civil society entities to carry out their work by providing operational grants, like the one we receive every year for AEGEE-Europe.<\/p>\n The Multiannual Financial Framework presented by the European Commission for the new proposal is quite good, because there has been a huge increase in the budget.<\/p>\n However, there are some gaps in the European Commission\u2019s proposal, which are not so good from young people\u00b4s point of view, specially for all of us belonging to International Youth NGOs (IYNGOs).<\/p>\n In few words, \u201cE4A<\/strong>\u201d is based on education and training, focusing on formal higher education in order to make young people more employable. The proposal focuses mainly on the needs of the labor market, without mentioning the importance of Non Formal Education for the development of our youth as active citizens, it removes the co-management of young people in the project, and very importantly, it removes the support of operational grants for youth organizations.<\/p>\n If this proposal were approved, it would mean that organizations like AEGEE-Europe would lose almost half of their annual budget, which would damage them and their work and in some cases could even make them disappear.<\/p>\n There is a fear for the Youth sector to disappear under the ERASMUS brand, as there is no clear separate budget line for youth in the proposal.<\/p>\n Here you can find some of the main differences between the two programs:<\/p>\n