The current labour scenario - restructured through
the correlated association of knowledge, mass employment paradigmatic
crisis, and the definitive and ever-growing integration of women - not
only brings forth the risk of vertiginous obsolescence of jobs positions
and knowledge, but also, the challenge represented by the generating
of self-employment. Both conditions have direct impact on the construction
of collective and individual identity, considering that the quality
and quantity of employment opportunities available to any society, determine
the extent of equity, since work has a decisive impact on the formulation
and concretion of life projects.
Therefore, as perceived from a collective dimension, the generation
of the right kind of conditions enabling men and women to fulfil their
right to decent work, not only is an essential element for achieving
competitiveness and productivity but also it is a means for fighting
poverty.
From an individual dimension, to be able to face the employment contraction,
the constant changes not only in the contents but also in the way things
ought to be made, high uncertainty level, as well as the current requirements
of the labour scenarios, people need to carry out constant and additional
efforts of learning, be able to identify resources and opportunities,
as well as having a high measure of autonomy. In order to do that, they
have to be aware of their capacity, know their own resources and be
aware of their limitations and to be able to co-relate it to those demands,
characteristics, perspectives of insertion and labour developments currently
offered by the economic and social environment.
To acknowledge that, to be able to gain access to work and to achieve
social insertion, a wide range of personal and social skills are definitely
needed, doesn't mean to imply, blame or make those lacking this attributes
in any way responsible of this situation, and neither is it meant to
exonerate either the system and/or the socio-economic policies for their
role and responsibility in the qualification of opportunities. On the
contrary, it outlines the need to consider the whole process of adjustment
as an articulated and inter-dependent achievement of sustainable and
encompassing development, including those new conditions and production
demands as well as those different necessities and capabilities of both
males and women.
This juxtaposition both leads and refers to those vocational training
policies most suitable to achieve work since they have the responsibility
of becoming a meeting place, the connection space, linking and/or co-ordinating
the necessities and possibilities of the productive system and those
of the people - males and women - who aim to fulfil those services.
Thus, and in order to intensify more than ever the technical and vocational
training which constitutes a fundamental human right and is considered
an essential component of the Decent Work Agenda, performing a decisive
role in the configuration of an environmental space that allows it to
be possible. There won't be a chance of obtaining decent work without
democracy, justice, social justice and citizen participation. And there
is no other way to achieve this but through education and technical
and vocational training for work.
The training policies alone cannot generate employment, but have the
potentiality of negotiating, by means of an integrative and systemic
focus, the knowledge, efforts , as well as the instances and resources
of those different protagonists converging in their generation and,
should above all, support people so that they go undergo the transformation
going from a passive status - depending from external intervention to
bring and place them near to increasing lack of labour opportunities
- to an active one, with active fellows seeking and creating their own
job opportunities.
In order to do it, it is necessary:
- To interact with the productive and social environment, and through
monitoring and understanding their requirements and indications, to
adapt and strengthen the quality of training, thus, contributing to
make possible that occupational development is both relevant and effective
so as to increase productivity and competitiveness and also to improve
people working conditions.
- To centre the focus in the person that is being trained in order
to:
- to conceive it as a integral human being, conditioned by their gender
and social and economic realities, based on their skills and experiences,
knowledge, feelings and values from which can change and improve their
conditions of social and labor insertion by means of individual and
collective strategies.
- to recover and to strengthen during and through the training programs
those competencies that go beyond and across the different occupational
fields and remain forever helping and present throughout diverse life
situations.
- To revise their methodologies and practices to make of vocational
training an instrument to increase opportunities for women and men,
to promote equity, eliminating barriers and explicit and hidden messages
tending to limitate the real potentialities of human beings.
From this point of view, the design and management of vocational training
policies towards labour should be guided to:
* To make "a crucial nexus -
an indivisible binomial" out of quality
and equity .
* To incorporate the vocational training to enhance the employment,
citizenship and gender perspective in an inter-related and
mainstreaming aproach.
By adopting these two big premises allows for the attention to be wholly
centred, in an integral and articulate approach, on those conditions
and requirements of the competencies within the current job market and
also on those of people; on the characteristics and demands of the new
occupational profiles and on the appraisal necessities, as well as full
development and strengthening of the individual capacities.
With this in mind, it becomes necessary to revise and re-formulate from
these arenas, the diverse components and dimensions of the training
tasks.
Thus, and only to mention just a few, it will be required:
- To adopt an integral and systemic guideline that can be understood
from both: the skills and vocational training arenas, and which acting
as a whole complex reality with interconnecting dimensions and components,
is linked directly or indirectly in permanent interaction.
- To revise the network of actors that take action within the local
labour context who will have to be necessarily co-ordinated and brought
into the net. To identify new actors (would those already known be
enough? )
- To arbitrate mechanisms of curriculum upgrading. To integrate and
combine disciplines suitable for proposal construction, to better
collaborate among different technical and occupational fields, lending
assistance to the ones evidencing the mainstreaming characteristics
of many of the most appreciated (valued) competencies found within
job duties.
- To revise the curriculum in contents and methods.
- To certify profiles and competencies or to validate the offer by
the recognition of the differents actors.
- To assist, not only to the female / male levels of participation
in the courses, but also to the conditions in which they do it . To
observe" how they do it." To considerate the different ways
of participating in the processes, to design the offer, leaving stereotypes
out of it.
From this frame of reference, one of the main principles of Cinterfor/ILO
action has been the wish to recover, to articulate and to promote the
national and regional learning and efforts focus on the continuous improvement
of vocational training as a tool to promote not only equality of opportunities
but also as a means to fight against poverty and discrimination. This
will to construct collectively and to socialize the accumulated knowledge
acquired during the last decade, has been reinforced by the execution
of the Programs FORMUJER, PROIMUJER and QUALITY AND EQUITY IN THE VOCATIONAL
TRAINING.
The implementation of these interventions has allowed Cinterfor/ILO
and the different executive entities to have a powerful learning and
experimenting platform:
- to develop and systematise a model of policies
consisting of an innovative package of methodologies, tools and good
practices all of them transferable to other entities and countries
in order to support the implementation of training skills in agreement
with the objectives, nature and organisation of the current labour
market and in this way increasing employability, especially on women
and on those communities most affected by exclusion, discrimination
and poverty.
- to contribute, by means of dissemination and technical co-operation,
to the generation of capacities in the social actors and also to construct
ideas and opinions and to awareness about the necessity and the contributions
of the gender mainstreaming for the innovation and the improvement
of the quality of the public and institutional policies of training
and labour.
This site has been created to share everything which has been learned
and achieved about this topics with the purpose of going ahead and be
able to share and construct knowledge.
Go
to the Model of Policy Graph
To be able to fulfil this purpose, this section has been structured
in the following way:
- A synthetic presentation of the subject / area of the problem
- Toolbox: specially created to examine thoroughly in the development
and also to share the products and the obtained results. It is organized
in: conceptual and methodological materials, didactic developments,
strategies and applied experiences, achievements, impacts and learnings.