1 / 12

EU CORD advocacy successes

EU CORD advocacy successes. 28 November 2012. ‘TVET’. Mysterious acronym In simple terms : vocational training / skills development Enabling young people to Get ready for the job market Become an entrepreneur Obtain gainful employment

ceana
Télécharger la présentation

EU CORD advocacy successes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EU CORD advocacysuccesses 28 November 2012

  2. ‘TVET’ • Mysteriousacronym • In simpleterms: vocational training / skillsdevelopment • Enablingyoungpeople to • Getreadyfor the job market • Becomean entrepreneur • Obtaingainfulemployment • Logical and necessary follow-up to normaleducation

  3. How we didit • Started in 2008 • Smallgroup of like-minded EU CORD members • ‘EU CORD TVET Advocacy Cluster’ • Cometogether, makeTerms of Reference and action plan • Meet a few times a year to monitor progress • EU CORD facilitated, Woord en Daad coordinated, other groupmemberscontributed

  4. Where we focussedon • Not the Parliament • Not the Council • But the EuropeanCommission • And Member State level (NL) • No publicity, justlobbying: informal meetings, later participation in open consultations

  5. TVET advocacy toolbox • Desk study, mapping • Position paper • Literaturereview • Goodpractices EU CORD members • Submissions in writtenconsultations • Oralpresentations in physicalconsultations • One-to-one meetings, phone and email contactswith officials

  6. TVET advocacyresults • Putting TVET higheron the agenda: consultations 2011 • Inclusion of TVET in ‘An Agenda forChange’, the guiding EU policy document for the years to come • Unfinished business…

  7. ‘DRR’ • Again a mysteriousacronym • Disaster Risk Reduction • Makingsurethat Disaster Risk Reductionbecomes a standard and core element of • Relief programs • Development programs • DRR was really a new topic and didnotfigureon the EU’s agenda

  8. How we didit • VOICE workinggroupon DRR formed in March 2007 • 22 organisationsfrom 7 different EU memberstates • Involvesagenciesamong the leading ECHO partners in the field of DRR • Establisheditself as mainreference point for EC withNGOson DRR policy and practice • Workinggroupchairedby EU CORD

  9. Where we focussedon • Not the Council • But the EuropeanCommission (DG DevCo and DG ECHO), • The EuropeanParliament, • Memberstates (e.g. Tearfund / DfID in the UK), • And global level

  10. DRR Advocacy toolbox • Desk study, mapping (scan of EU Country Strategy Papers) • Position paper • Submissions in writtenconsultations (e.g. EU Consensus onHumanitarian Aid, EU policyonadaptation to climatechange) • Oralpresentations in physicalconsultations • Phone and email contactswith officials

  11. DRR Advocacysuccesses • Effective engagement with EU on DRR issues • Developing and nurturingrelationshipswithkey EC officials and MEPs • Development, agreement and use of VOICE DRR policyrecommendationsfor Consensus onHumanitarian Aid • CommunicationonHumanitarian Aid, Parliament report and final EU consensus all includegood content on DRR, whichreflectsrecommendations made and consistentlyusedbyworkinggroup

  12. Success factors • Commitment of people and theirorganisations to a group • Sharedvision, sharedadvocacy goals • Window of opportunity at EU level • Using practical developmentexperience to underpinadvocacy message • Continuousnetworking

More Related