React-EU Future Power (Q4040314): Difference between revisions

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(‎Removed claims)
Tag: Replaced
(‎Changed an Item: import item from Sweden)
Property / instance of
 
Property / instance of: Kohesio project / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / financed by
 
Property / financed by: European Union / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / country
 
Property / country: Sweden / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / budget
 
335,489.75 Euro
Amount335,489.75 Euro
UnitEuro
Property / budget: 335,489.75 Euro / rank
 
Preferred rank
Property / budget: 335,489.75 Euro / qualifier
 
exchange rate to Euro: 0.0956 Euro
Amount0.0956 Euro
UnitEuro
Property / budget: 335,489.75 Euro / qualifier
 
point in time: 26 January 2022
Timestamp+2022-01-26T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 day
Before0
After0
Property / budget
 
3,509,307.0 Swedish krona
Amount3,509,307.0 Swedish krona
UnitSwedish krona
Property / budget: 3,509,307.0 Swedish krona / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / EU contribution
 
335,489.75 Euro
Amount335,489.75 Euro
UnitEuro
Property / EU contribution: 335,489.75 Euro / rank
 
Preferred rank
Property / EU contribution: 335,489.75 Euro / qualifier
 
exchange rate to Euro: 0.0956 Euro
Amount0.0956 Euro
UnitEuro
Property / EU contribution: 335,489.75 Euro / qualifier
 
point in time: 26 January 2022
Timestamp+2022-01-26T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 day
Before0
After0
Property / EU contribution
 
3,509,307.0 Swedish krona
Amount3,509,307.0 Swedish krona
UnitSwedish krona
Property / EU contribution: 3,509,307.0 Swedish krona / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / start time
 
1 January 2022
Timestamp+2022-01-01T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 day
Before0
After0
Property / start time: 1 January 2022 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / end time
 
30 April 2023
Timestamp+2023-04-30T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 day
Before0
After0
Property / end time: 30 April 2023 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / beneficiary name (string)
 
Falun Borlänge-regionen AB
Property / beneficiary name (string): Falun Borlänge-regionen AB / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / beneficiary
 
Property / beneficiary: Q4040003 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / summary
 
The labor market is facing major changes as a result of the recent covid-19 pandemic. The transition to a more digital working life has moved forward at a furious pace. Many companies have been obliged to change the way they operate. Some have had to adjust their working arrangements significantly while others have gone out of business entirely. Many of the jobs that have disappeared as a result of this reorganization are the so-called entry-level jobs that many young people and people with a foreign background get as their first job. It is mainly the hotel and restaurant, culture, trade and service sectors that have been affected. In Sweden, youth unemployment was at a record high during the summer of 2020. This situation stabilized somewhat during the autumn when, as a response to declining job prospects, many young people applied to study at university and college,. Despite this, many young people are still without work or gainful employment. Compared to the same month in 2020, by August 2021, the total number of unemployed young people in Dalarna had fallen by 28% to 1,634 people. During the same period, the total number of unemployed people as a whole had increased by more than 12 months by 26.4% to 287. 529 young people had been unemployed for more than 6 months. This increase in long-term unemployment was greater among young men than among young women. And this gap between men and women was greater in the group that had been unemployed for more than 12 months, than in the group that had been unemployed for no more than 6 months. Virtually all categories of young people have been affected by the pandemic: young people who usually work for a couple of years before moving on to university studies; young people who have completed some form of higher education preparedness course but do not know what they want to do when they "grow up"; young people who have completed vocational training in an industry affected by the pandemic that is no longer recruiting new staff; and young people who are finding that they cannot get an apprenticeship or APL place. Those who are worst affected are those who are farthest away from the labor market. Most vulnerable are those young people who have not yet started, or completed their high school education, those who do not have an apprenticeship or internship, and those who have a shorter period of residence in Sweden and young people with a reduced working capacity that is a result of a disability. The Swedish Public Employment Service describes the consequences of this youth unemployment: increased unemployment among young people - and the greater risk of more long-term unemployed young people - is serious and can contribute to a longer-term weakening of young people’s position in the labor market and their continuing absence from the world of work. Young people who do not have a foothold in the labor market and who are not studying an upper secondary school program arethe responsibility of their local municipality’s activity provisions up to the age of 20 (or, KAA). Between the ages of 20 and 25 young people can be offered employment via their municipality’s unemployment or job-seekers’ departments. The purpose of the Future Power project is to strengthen the opportunities for young people between the ages of 16 and 24 who have become unemployed as a result of the pandemic or who, after completing their education and involvement in targeted employment initiatives, have still not been able to enter the labor market . Through a range of different and varied targeted initiatives and activities, the participants in the Future Power project will find their position in the labor market strengthened. The initiatives will be inclusive and accessible so that all participants can take take advantage of them. This in turn will enable them to move into work or studies directly, or at the very least bring them closer to the labor market by strengthening the position from which they can apply for for jobs, internships or training programs. In order to further strengthen individual capacity and increase employers’ access to a latent skills supply base, the project seeks to reflect the principles of horizontalism. Among other things, individuals are encouraged to make norm-breaking educational choices. The project is carried out in close collaboration with four municipalities (Falun, Borlänge, Säter and Gagnef), their policy responsibility for municipal employment (KAA in swedish) and their respective employment departments. An existing network of employers and training providers is also linked to the project. The initiatives planned for this project that are intended to supplement and strengthen the activities currently conducted in the municipalities will include: - initiatives to identify young people’s relevant competences - improving employer contacts – offering an arena for meetings and support in applying for and finding a job or education - coaching as a means of streng (Swedish)
Property / summary: The labor market is facing major changes as a result of the recent covid-19 pandemic. The transition to a more digital working life has moved forward at a furious pace. Many companies have been obliged to change the way they operate. Some have had to adjust their working arrangements significantly while others have gone out of business entirely. Many of the jobs that have disappeared as a result of this reorganization are the so-called entry-level jobs that many young people and people with a foreign background get as their first job. It is mainly the hotel and restaurant, culture, trade and service sectors that have been affected. In Sweden, youth unemployment was at a record high during the summer of 2020. This situation stabilized somewhat during the autumn when, as a response to declining job prospects, many young people applied to study at university and college,. Despite this, many young people are still without work or gainful employment. Compared to the same month in 2020, by August 2021, the total number of unemployed young people in Dalarna had fallen by 28% to 1,634 people. During the same period, the total number of unemployed people as a whole had increased by more than 12 months by 26.4% to 287. 529 young people had been unemployed for more than 6 months. This increase in long-term unemployment was greater among young men than among young women. And this gap between men and women was greater in the group that had been unemployed for more than 12 months, than in the group that had been unemployed for no more than 6 months. Virtually all categories of young people have been affected by the pandemic: young people who usually work for a couple of years before moving on to university studies; young people who have completed some form of higher education preparedness course but do not know what they want to do when they "grow up"; young people who have completed vocational training in an industry affected by the pandemic that is no longer recruiting new staff; and young people who are finding that they cannot get an apprenticeship or APL place. Those who are worst affected are those who are farthest away from the labor market. Most vulnerable are those young people who have not yet started, or completed their high school education, those who do not have an apprenticeship or internship, and those who have a shorter period of residence in Sweden and young people with a reduced working capacity that is a result of a disability. The Swedish Public Employment Service describes the consequences of this youth unemployment: increased unemployment among young people - and the greater risk of more long-term unemployed young people - is serious and can contribute to a longer-term weakening of young people’s position in the labor market and their continuing absence from the world of work. Young people who do not have a foothold in the labor market and who are not studying an upper secondary school program arethe responsibility of their local municipality’s activity provisions up to the age of 20 (or, KAA). Between the ages of 20 and 25 young people can be offered employment via their municipality’s unemployment or job-seekers’ departments. The purpose of the Future Power project is to strengthen the opportunities for young people between the ages of 16 and 24 who have become unemployed as a result of the pandemic or who, after completing their education and involvement in targeted employment initiatives, have still not been able to enter the labor market . Through a range of different and varied targeted initiatives and activities, the participants in the Future Power project will find their position in the labor market strengthened. The initiatives will be inclusive and accessible so that all participants can take take advantage of them. This in turn will enable them to move into work or studies directly, or at the very least bring them closer to the labor market by strengthening the position from which they can apply for for jobs, internships or training programs. In order to further strengthen individual capacity and increase employers’ access to a latent skills supply base, the project seeks to reflect the principles of horizontalism. Among other things, individuals are encouraged to make norm-breaking educational choices. The project is carried out in close collaboration with four municipalities (Falun, Borlänge, Säter and Gagnef), their policy responsibility for municipal employment (KAA in swedish) and their respective employment departments. An existing network of employers and training providers is also linked to the project. The initiatives planned for this project that are intended to supplement and strengthen the activities currently conducted in the municipalities will include: - initiatives to identify young people’s relevant competences - improving employer contacts – offering an arena for meetings and support in applying for and finding a job or education - coaching as a means of streng (Swedish) / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / intervention field
 
Property / intervention field: Access to employment for job-seekers and inactive people, including the long-term unemployed and people far from the labour market, also through local employment initiatives and support for labour mobility / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / fund
 
Property / fund: European Social Fund / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / postal code
 
78170
Property / postal code: 78170 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / programme
 
Property / programme: Investments in growth and employment - SE - ESF/YEI / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 13:57, 26 January 2022

Project Q4040314 in Sweden
Language Label Description Also known as
English
React-EU Future Power
Project Q4040314 in Sweden

    Statements

    0 references
    335,489.75 Euro
    0.0956 Euro
    26 January 2022
    0 references
    3,509,307.0 Swedish krona
    0 references
    335,489.75 Euro
    0.0956 Euro
    26 January 2022
    0 references
    3,509,307.0 Swedish krona
    0 references
    1 January 2022
    0 references
    30 April 2023
    0 references
    Falun Borlänge-regionen AB
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    78170
    0 references
    The labor market is facing major changes as a result of the recent covid-19 pandemic. The transition to a more digital working life has moved forward at a furious pace. Many companies have been obliged to change the way they operate. Some have had to adjust their working arrangements significantly while others have gone out of business entirely. Many of the jobs that have disappeared as a result of this reorganization are the so-called entry-level jobs that many young people and people with a foreign background get as their first job. It is mainly the hotel and restaurant, culture, trade and service sectors that have been affected. In Sweden, youth unemployment was at a record high during the summer of 2020. This situation stabilized somewhat during the autumn when, as a response to declining job prospects, many young people applied to study at university and college,. Despite this, many young people are still without work or gainful employment. Compared to the same month in 2020, by August 2021, the total number of unemployed young people in Dalarna had fallen by 28% to 1,634 people. During the same period, the total number of unemployed people as a whole had increased by more than 12 months by 26.4% to 287. 529 young people had been unemployed for more than 6 months. This increase in long-term unemployment was greater among young men than among young women. And this gap between men and women was greater in the group that had been unemployed for more than 12 months, than in the group that had been unemployed for no more than 6 months. Virtually all categories of young people have been affected by the pandemic: young people who usually work for a couple of years before moving on to university studies; young people who have completed some form of higher education preparedness course but do not know what they want to do when they "grow up"; young people who have completed vocational training in an industry affected by the pandemic that is no longer recruiting new staff; and young people who are finding that they cannot get an apprenticeship or APL place. Those who are worst affected are those who are farthest away from the labor market. Most vulnerable are those young people who have not yet started, or completed their high school education, those who do not have an apprenticeship or internship, and those who have a shorter period of residence in Sweden and young people with a reduced working capacity that is a result of a disability. The Swedish Public Employment Service describes the consequences of this youth unemployment: increased unemployment among young people - and the greater risk of more long-term unemployed young people - is serious and can contribute to a longer-term weakening of young people’s position in the labor market and their continuing absence from the world of work. Young people who do not have a foothold in the labor market and who are not studying an upper secondary school program arethe responsibility of their local municipality’s activity provisions up to the age of 20 (or, KAA). Between the ages of 20 and 25 young people can be offered employment via their municipality’s unemployment or job-seekers’ departments. The purpose of the Future Power project is to strengthen the opportunities for young people between the ages of 16 and 24 who have become unemployed as a result of the pandemic or who, after completing their education and involvement in targeted employment initiatives, have still not been able to enter the labor market . Through a range of different and varied targeted initiatives and activities, the participants in the Future Power project will find their position in the labor market strengthened. The initiatives will be inclusive and accessible so that all participants can take take advantage of them. This in turn will enable them to move into work or studies directly, or at the very least bring them closer to the labor market by strengthening the position from which they can apply for for jobs, internships or training programs. In order to further strengthen individual capacity and increase employers’ access to a latent skills supply base, the project seeks to reflect the principles of horizontalism. Among other things, individuals are encouraged to make norm-breaking educational choices. The project is carried out in close collaboration with four municipalities (Falun, Borlänge, Säter and Gagnef), their policy responsibility for municipal employment (KAA in swedish) and their respective employment departments. An existing network of employers and training providers is also linked to the project. The initiatives planned for this project that are intended to supplement and strengthen the activities currently conducted in the municipalities will include: - initiatives to identify young people’s relevant competences - improving employer contacts – offering an arena for meetings and support in applying for and finding a job or education - coaching as a means of streng (Swedish)
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    Identifiers

    2021/00370
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