Publications on youth employment

  1. Partnerships for Youth Employment in the CIS– Final evaluation (Evaluation Summary)

    12 March 2018

    Project: RER/12/01/LUK - Evaluation Consultant: Tony Powers

  2. Promoting Labour Market Mobility in the Republic of Kazakhstan and the Russian Federation

    19 April 2017

    This report focuses on labour market mobility in the Republic of Kazakhstan and the Russian Federation, in particular mobility that entails a transition from one region to another within the countries. We will examine how labour market programmes (LMPs) should be designed to promote mobility. In order to identify relevant possibilities, Kazakhstan and Russia have been compared to three Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. The central idea that the report seeks to communicate is that the two countries can develop their existing labour market policies to create an infrastructure of programmes and measures that facilitate and reinforce labour market mobility.

  3. W4Y Russian Federation country summary

    12 December 2016

  4. Work for Youth (W4Y) - (Final Evaluation Summary)

    07 November 2016

    Project: GLO/11/01/MCF - Evaluation Consultants: Anthony Dewees, Marie-Laure Talbot, Tony Powers

  5. Jobs and skills for youth: review of policies for youth employment of the Russian Federation

    21 August 2015

  6. Partnerships for youth employment in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) (Midterm Evaluation Summary)

    29 May 2015

    Project: RER/12/01/LUK - Evaluation Consultant: Svetlana Bronuyk

  7. Labour market transitions of young women and men in Eastern Europe and Central Asia

    26 March 2015

    This report presents the results of the School-to-work transition surveys (SWTS) implemented in six countries in the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region – Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, Republic of Moldova, Russian Federation, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Ukraine – in 2012 or 2013. The indicators resulting from the surveys and analysed in this report provide a much more detailed picture of the youth in the labour market in a part of the world where unemployment rates are among the highest in the world.