Recommendation concerning Special Youth Employment and Training
Schemes for Development Purposes
Recommendation:R136
Place: Geneva
Session of the Conference:54
Date of adoption=23:06:1970
The General Conference of the International Labour
Organisation,
Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the
International Labour Office, and having met in its Fifty-fourth Session on 3
June 1970, and
Recalling the provisions of existing international labour
Conventions and Recommendations on the training and employment of young persons,
in particular the Unemployment (Young Persons) Recommendation, 1935, the
Vocational Training Recommendation, 1962, and the Employment Policy Convention
and Recommendation, 1964, and
Considering that special youth employment schemes and
training schemes designed to give young persons the necessary skills to enable
them to adapt to the pace of a changing society and to take an active part in
the development of their country constitute an approach to youth employment
problems, supplementary to those of existing instruments, and
Noting that the problems which this approach is intended to
meet have only come into prominence on a wide scale in recent years, and
Considering that it is important to adopt an instrument
setting out the objectives, methods and safeguards of such special schemes, in
such manner that they would be fully consistent with earlier international
labour standards relevant to conditions of service therein, particularly those
of the Forced Labour Convention, 1930, and the Abolition of Forced Labour
Convention, 1957, and
Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with
regard to special youth employment and training schemes for development
purposes, which is the sixth item on the agenda of the session, and
Having determined that these proposals shall take the form
of a Recommendation,
adopts this twenty-third day of June of the year one
thousand nine hundred and seventy, the following Recommendation, which may be
cited as the Special Youth Schemes Recommendation, 1970.
This Recommendation applies to special schemes designed
to enable young persons to take part in activities directed to the economic and
social development of their country and to acquire education, skills and
experience facilitating their subsequent economic activity on a lasting basis
and promoting their participation in society.
These schemes are hereinafter referred to as special
schemes.
The following may be regarded as special schemes for the
purpose of this Recommendation:
schemes which meet needs for youth employment and
training not yet met by existing national educational or vocational training
programmes or by normal opportunities on the employment market;
schemes which enable young persons, especially
unemployed young persons, who have educational or technical qualifications which
are needed by the community for development, particularly in the economic,
social, educational or health fields, to use their qualifications in the service
of the community.
Special schemes should be organised within the framework
of national development plans where these exist and should, in particular, be
fully integrated with human resources plans and programmes directed towards the
achievement of full and productive employment as well as with regular programmes
for the education and training of young people.
Special schemes should have an interim character to meet
current and pressing economic and social needs. They should not duplicate or
prejudice other measures of economic policy or the development of regular
educational or vocational training programmes nor be regarded as an alternative
to these measures and these regular programmes.
Special schemes should not be operated in a manner
likely to lower labour standards nor should the services of participants therein
be used for the advantage of private persons or undertakings.
Special schemes should provide participants, where
appropriate, with at least a minimum level of education.
The essential elements of every special scheme should
include the safeguarding of human dignity and the development of the personality
and of a sense of individual and social responsibility.
Special schemes should be administered without
discrimination on the basis of race, colour, sex, religion, political opinion,
national extraction or social origin; they should be used for the active
promotion of equality of opportunity and treatment.
The purposes and objectives of each special scheme and
the categories of participants should be clearly defined by the competent
authority and should be subject to periodic review in the light of experience.
Participation in special schemes should be voluntary;
exceptions may be permitted only by legislative action and where there is full
compliance with the terms of existing international labour Conventions on forced
labour and employment policy.
Schemes in respect of which exceptions may be so
permitted may include:
schemes of education and training involving obligatory
enrolment of unemployed young people within a definite period after the age
limit of regular school attendance;
schemes for young people who have previously accepted an
obligation to serve for a definite period as a condition of being enabled to
acquire education or technical qualifications of special value to the community
for development.
Where exceptions are so permitted, participants should,
to the greatest possible extent, be given a free choice among different
available forms of activity and different regions within the country and due
account should be taken in their assignment of their qualifications and
aptitudes.
The conditions of service of participants in special
schemes should be clearly defined by the competent authority; they should be in
conformity with the legal provisions governing minimum age for admission to
employment and in harmony with other legal provisions applicable to young
persons in regular training or in normal employment.
Participants should continue to have the opportunity of
membership in youth or trade union organisations of their choice and of taking
part in their activities.
There should be formal procedures for appeal by
participants against decisions concerning their recruitment, their admission or
their conditions of service, as well as informal grievance procedures to deal
with minor complaints.
III. Schemes Which Meet Needs for Youth Employment and
Training Not Yet Met by Existing National Educational or Vocational Training
Programmes or by Normal Opportunities on the Employment Market
As appropriate to national needs and circumstances,
special schemes to which this Part of this Recommendation applies should serve
one or more of the following specific purposes:
to give young persons who are educationally or otherwise
disadvantaged such education, skills and work habits as are necessary for useful
and remunerative economic activity and for integration into society;
to involve young persons in national economic and social
development, including agricultural and rural development;
to provide useful occupation related to economic and
social development for young persons who would otherwise be unemployed.
In selecting young persons to participate in social
schemes, the following should be taken into account:
age and education, training and work experience if any,
in relation, according to the nature of the scheme, to the aim of extending the
opportunities of disadvantaged young persons, to ability to benefit from the
scheme and to ability to contribute to the scheme;
mental and physical aptitude for the tasks to be
performed, both as a participant and subsequently;
the extent to which the experience to be acquired in the
scheme is likely to enhance the further opportunities of the young persons
concerned and their potential usefulness in economic and social development.
Age-limits for participation which are appropriate to
the training offered and the work to be performed in different kinds of special
schemes should be specified by the competent authority and should take account
of international labour standards regarding minimum age for admission to
employment.
Special schemes should allow as large a number of young
persons as possible to transfer to normal economic activity or to regular
educational or vocational training programmes and the period of participation
should accordingly be limited.
In all special schemes, appropriate action should be
taken to ensure that before admission each participant fully understands all the
conditions of service, including rules of conduct that may exist, the work
content of the scheme, the required training and entitlements during the period
and at the time of termination of service.
The content of special schemes should be adapted to and
may vary, even within one scheme, according to the age, sex, educational and
training level and capacities of the participants.
All special schemes should include a brief initial
period for:
instruction in matters of importance to all
participants, such as, in particular, general safety and health rules and the
detailed regulations governing activities under the scheme;
accustoming participants to the conditions of life and
work under the scheme and stimulating their interest;
ascertaining the participants' aptitudes with a view to
placing them in the type of activity best corresponding to these aptitudes.
Participants in special schemes should be provided with
a complement of education, including civic, economic and social education,
related to their needs and to the needs and aspirations of the country and
should be informed of the role and functions of organisations established on a
voluntary basis to represent the interests of workers and employers.
Special schemes designed, in whole or in part, to
provide young persons who have limited opportunities with the skills necessary
for useful economic activity should:
concentrate on preparing participants for occupations in
which they are likely to find opportunities for useful work, while giving
fullest possible consideration to their occupational preferences;
provide participants with a sound basis of practical
skills and related theoretical knowledge;
take account of the potential role of participants as a
stimulating influence on others, and give them the qualifications necessary for
such a role;
facilitate and, as far as possible, ensure:
transition to regular educational or vocational training
programmes or to other special schemes for further education or training,
particularly of those showing special abilities;
transition to normal economic acvitity, in particular
by measures designed to ensure the acceptability, in such economic activity, of
the qualifications acquired by participants.
Special schemes designed, in whole or in part, to
involve young persons in economic or social development projects should:
include training, at least to the extent of providing
full training as required for the work to be undertaken, and training in
relevant health and safety measures;
aim at developing good work practices;
employ participants, where possible, in fields for which
they show aptitude and have some qualification.
Criteria for selecting work projects for the special
schemes referred to in the preceding Paragraph should include the following:
potential contribution to expansion of economic activity
in the country or region and, in particular, to expansion of subsequent
opportunities for the participants;
training value, with particular reference to occupations
in which participants are subsequently likely to find opportunities for useful
work;
value as an investment in economic and social
development and economic viability, including costs in relation to results;
need for special means of action, implying in particular
that the work of participants will not be in unfair competition with that of
workers in normal employment.
The conditions of service should comply at least with
the following standards:
the duration of service should not normally exceed two
years;
certain grounds, such as medical reasons, or family or
personal difficulties, should be recognised as justifying the release of
participants before the expiry of the normal period of service;
the hours spent in a day and in a week on work and
training should be so limited as to allow sufficient time for education and for
rest as well as leisure activities;
in addition to such adequate accommodation, food and
clothing as may be appropriate to the nature of the special scheme, participants
should receive a payment in cash and be offered the opportunity and incentive to
accumulate some savings;
in special schemes with a duration of service of one
year or more, participants should be granted an annual holiday, where possible
with free travel to and from their homes;
as far as possible, participants should be covered by
social security provisions applicable to persons working under normal contracts;
in any event there should be arrangements for free medical care of participants
and for compensation in respect of incapacity or death resulting from injury or
illness contracted in the special scheme.
All special schemes should include arrangements which
ensure adequate supervision of participants by trained staff having access to
technical and pedagogical guidance.
In the selection of staff, emphasis should be placed not
only on satisfactory qualifications for and experience in the work to be
performed, but also on understanding of young persons, on qualities of
leadership and on adaptability. At least some members of the staff should have
experience of normal employment outside special schemes.
All possible sources of recruitment of staff should be
explored, including the possibility of encouraging participants in special
schemes who have shown qualities of leadership to prepare themselves for staff
positions.
Training of supervisory and other technical staff should
include, in addition to such instruction in vocational specialities as may be
necessary, at least the following:
training in instruction techniques, with particular
emphasis on those used in training young persons;
basic instruction in human relations, with special
reference to motivation and work attitudes;
training in work organisation, including the assignment
of duties according to the abilities and training level of participants.
Training of administrative staff should include, in
addition to such instruction in vocational specialities as may be necessary, at
least the following:
instruction designed to give the persons concerned an
understanding of the objectives of the special scheme and knowledge of
applicable labour and youth protection legislation, and of specific rules and
regulations governing the schemes;
instruction to provide a sufficient knowledge of the
technical aspects of the work of the scheme;
such instruction in human relations as will facilitate
good relations with supervisory and other technical staff and with participants.
During service in a special scheme, participants should
be given information and guidance to assist them in making decisions regarding
their occupational future.
Participants showing special aptitudes should be helped
in all appropriate ways to continue their education and training outside the
special scheme on completion of service.
Special and immediate efforts should be made to
integrate participants rapidly in normal economic activity on completion of
their term of service; these should be in addition to the regular efforts by the
employment services and all other appropriate bodies.
The release of participants from special schemes should
as far as possible be related, in time and in number, to the capacity of the
economy to absorb new entrants into gainful activity: Provided that in
exceptional schemes with a compulsary element the individual's right to leave
the scheme after the period of service originally specified should be ensured.
Assistance, wherever possible through existing
institutions, to former participants who establish themselves on their own
account, or as members of a group, might include:
promotion of access to credit, marketing and saving
facilities;
continuing contact to provide encouragement and
necessary technical managerial advice;
in the case of co-operatives, financial and
administrative aid as provided for in the Co-operatives (Developing Countries)
Recommendation, 1966.
To the extent that resources permit, participants should
receive on satisfactory completion of service a payment in cash or a payment in
kind, such as a tool-kit, designed to assist their establishment in normal
economic activity.
IV. Schemes Which Enable Young Persons Who Have Educational
or Technical Qualifications Which Are Needed by the Community for Development to
Use Their Qualifications in the Service of the Community
Special schemes to which this Part of this
Recommendation applies should stimulate the interest of young persons in the
economic and social development of their country and develop a sense of
responsibility to the community.
Participants should be employed in fields for which they
are specially qualified or in closely related fields.
As necessary, the qualifications of participants should
be supplemented with training in skills and methods needed for the tasks to be
performed.
Arrangements should be made under which qualified
guidance and advice on problems encountered in their assignment are readily
available to participants.
The conditions of service should comply at least with
the following standards:
the duration of service should not normally exceed two
years;
certain grounds, such as medical reasons, or family or
personal difficulties, should be recognised as justifying the release of
participants before the expiry of the normal period of service;
work and training schedules should take account of the
need of participants for rest and leisure;
in addition to such adequate board and lodging as may be
appropriate to the nature of the special scheme, participants should receive an
appropriate remuneration;
in special schemes with a duration of service of one
year or more, participants should be granted an annual holiday, where possible
with free travel to and from their homes;
participants should be covered by any appropriate social
security provisions applicable to persons working under normal contracts; in any
event there should be arrangements for free medical care of participants and for
compensation in respect of incapacity or death resulting from injury or illness
contracted in the special scheme.
Measures should be taken to facilitate the absorption of
participants, after termination of service, into normal employment in their
profession or occupation.
The direction and co-ordination of special schemes at
the national level should be achieved by means of some appropriate body or
bodies established by the competent authority.
The body or bodies should, wherever possible, include,
in addition to government members, representatives of workers', employers' and
youth organisations so as to ensure their active participation in the planning,
operation, co-ordination, inspection and evaluation of the special schemes.
In the performance of these tasks the body or bodies
should, as necessary, consult voluntary agencies and authorities responsible for
such relevant fields as labour, education, economic affairs, agriculture,
industry and social affairs.
The body or bodies should maintain continuous liaison
with the authorities responsible for regular educational and training programmes,
in order to ensure co-ordination with a view to the gradual elimination of
special schemes as rapidly as possible.
The active participation of local authorities should be
sought in relation to the choice and implementation of projects within the
framework of special schemes.
When establishing special schemes, the competent
authority should endeavour to provide sufficient financial and material
resources and the necessary qualified staff to ensure their full implementation.
In this connection particular attention should be given to ways in which the
schemes could generate their own sources of income. No financial contribution
should be required from the participant or his family.
Provision should be made for the systematic inspection
and auditing of special schemes.
Organisation at the local level should be such as to
train and encourage the participants gradually to take a share in the
administration of their scheme.
As regards special schemes under which young persons
from one country participate in activities directed to the development of
another country, the competent authorities and bodies concerned should apply the
relevant provisions of this Recommendation as fully as possible in respect of
matters within their jurisdiction and should co-operate with each other with a
view both to ensuring the application of such provisions to matters requiring
joint action and to resolving any difficulties which may arise in connection
with such application.