Issue 225, May 2024
The article, which was actually an edited version of a speech given by Andrew Leigh at the National Youth Conference (held in Canberra during April), used Australian Bureau of Statistics figures to draw comparisons between young people in 2024 and those from earlier years. The author, who is a politician and economist, found that young people today are smoking less, drinking less, better educated, using fewer drugs, having fewer babies as teenagers, and committing fewer crimes than in the past. He points to interesting work by Abigail Wills from Oxford University, who says that ‘the anxiety about young people today also stems from changes in how we think about their role in the community’. It seems that because young people are starting work later, people are finding it hard to recognise their economic value to society and the ways in which they contribute. Wills says that people need to ‘start thinking about ways of improving adult perceptions of the young, rather than thinking up panic solutions to an imaginary cataclysm of declining morals’.
The article goes on to suggest ways in which young people themselves can contribute to improving the ways adults perceive youth. You can read the full article, entitled ‘Reckless beyond words?’ here.
Source:Inside Story (newsletter produced by the Swinburne Institute for Social Research), 12 May 2024.
Issue 225, May 2024
21 May–12 June 2024, Several venues
Brisbane, Fremantle, Melbourne, Sydney
Visit the Positive Schools website
1 June 2024, Sydney
A forum to discuss issues that young refugees and migrants face when dealing with police and the justice system.
For more visit the website
4 June 2024, Redfern, Sydney
A forum to examine the success of the NSW Youth Health Policy 2011–2024. Young people are encouraged to attend.
For more visit the website
10–12 June 2024, Nicosia, Cyprus
The theme is ‘Theory and method in child and youth research’.
For more visit the website
24–26 June 2024, Cairns, Queensland
One of the conference themes is: ‘New concepts, research and practices in suicide prevention – Youth’.
For more visit the website
29–30 June 2024, Gold Coast
This well-organised conference has keynote speakers locked in.
Visit the No 2 Bullying website
29–30 June 2024, Newcastle
The theme is ‘Stuff That REALLY Works’. The conference will explore programs, strategies and ideas for working with young people.
Visit the RYDON website
29–30 June 2024, Canberra
This year’s theme will be ‘Home. School. Work.’
Visit the Australian Youth Mentoring Conference
6–8 July 2024, Sydney
The themes for this year’s conference will be ‘Youth, Pathways, and Skills’. Registrations are now open.
Visit the National Vocational Education and Training Resource Conference website
8 July 2024, Sydney
This event is organised by CREATE and will feature young people in a panel discussion about changes they would like implemented.
For more visit the website
8–11 July 2024, Wellington, New Zealand
The theme will be ‘Growing healthy children, young people and families’.
Visit the Conference of the Australiasian Human Development Association website
27 July–7 August 2024, Belgrade, Serbia
This summit promotes the part young people can play in developing sustainable living into the future.
For more visit the website
21–23 September 2024, Prato, Italy
This conference is being organised by the Centre for Forensic Behavioural Science at Swinburne University, but will be held in Italy at the Monash University Centre, Prato, Tuscany
For more visit the website
28–30 September 2024, Sydney
The call for papers for this conference closed on 20 April.
Visit the Australian Social Policy Conference website
8–10 October 2024, Montreal, Canada
Visit the IAYMH website
9–10 November 2024, Melbourne
Youth unemployment will feature prominently in this event, which is an initiative of the Australia and New Zealand Mental Health Association.
For more information visit the website. Abstracts close on 30 July.
11–13 November 2024, Melbourne
Abstracts for this conference are now open and must be submitted online by 30 June.
For more information visit the website.
Issue 225, May 2024
The resources, made available on the CFCA website, include:
Outstanding among these resources is an item titled, 'Young people from refugee and migrant backgrounds lead the way in their own sexual health education'. This looks at an initiative of the Multicultural Health and Support Service called H3 Express that uses 'hip-hop, song, spoken word and dance' to spread sexual health messages to newly arrived young refugees.
The website where these resources are located also includes links to a directory of key organisations and peak bodies across Australia that support professionals who work with culturally and linguistically diverse communities.
Click here to visit the full range of CFCA resources on this topic.
Source:CFCA News, 22 April 2024
Issue 225, May 2024
Below is a round-up of the responses most relevant to the youth sector, along with some related media articles:
YACVic welcomes the new Youth Employment Strategy, but like many organisations, points out that, as this won’t start until December 2024 it has left a large cohort of young people in limbo. Youth Connections, which the new strategy encompasses, was defunded in December 2014, so young people are having to wait for a year while the new services are put in place.
For more, go to the YACVic website.
YNOT also ‘cautiously welcomes’ the Youth Employment Strategy, but says that it is unclear how social and personal barriers preventing youth from engaging in employment and study will be addressed.
The YANQ Facebook page has a number of strongly worded postings about the Budget.
The Youth Coalition of the ACT has a round-up of media reaction to the Budget.
ACOSS says the Budget fails the fairness test, although the Government has listened to the community’s concerns about the closure of Youth Connections.
Pro Bono says the Youth Employment Strategy has been described by the not-for-profit sector as an ‘encouraging move’.
Mission Australia also welcomes the Youth Employment Strategy, and the fact that some of the punitive measure that affected youth in last year’s budget have been wound back (such as the six-month waiting period for those under 30 to receive welfare payments) though it is still unhappy with the one-month wait for those under 25 to receive welfare payments.
The BSL says that the new Youth Employment Strategy is a step in the right direction towards solving the youth unemployment problem, but also has a warning about the one-month waiting period for those 25 years and under to receive welfare payments.
In a strongly worded statement St Vincent de Paul says that the Budget ‘persists in putting the book into…young people’.
Article from The Australian about new scheme to replace Youth Connections – will be too late for some.
Article from The Australian about waiting one month for welfare payments.