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Hello, my name is Alberto Cottica.
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I work at the Council of Europe
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on a project called EdgeRyders,
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it is about the transition of young people
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to an independent, active life.
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If you look at the data,
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young europeans seem pretty much like a lost generation.
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Unemployment is very high,
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and what’s worse, about one person in five
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is not in employment, education or training.
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This does not happen only in your early twenties.
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It actually gets worse as you go towards your mid-thirties.
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What we’re looking at here is a general loss of autonomy
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of the adult population.
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The young just happen to be in the line of fire.
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But that’s not the whole story.
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Europe, and indeed the world,
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are full of extremely entrepreneurial, brilliant, generous,
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talented, young people.
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They find new paths to activism,
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for example leveraging the diversity of backgrounds
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of second and third generation europeans
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to make society more open.
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They start companies to build large-scale urban games
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that are used to reappropriate public spaces
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and use them in new ways.
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They move to North Sea islands
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to explore the way small communities
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can switch to renewable energy sources,
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finding a new sense of purpose as they do so.
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And they make learning easier to access
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by launching free, peer-to-peer, online schools.
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These people don’t work together.
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In fact, they’ve never even met.
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But their activities seem to be connected
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in a coherent picture.
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And this picture is that of
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the world we’ll all be living in tomorrow.
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And by the way, though you certainly can view them as successful
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they are by a measure of success
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that is not the same as that normally accepted
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by the society at large.
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Many struggle to make a living
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or have done so as they started their journeys.
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Just like you and me.
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How to make a living with integrity,
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how to live the kind of life that we want,
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how to have a say in our communities.
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So many people in Europe and elsewhere,
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young and not so young,
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are thinking very hard about these problems,
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and that makes them - us - the experts.
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And when you pull together a lot of experts
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what you have is a think tank.
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EdgeRyders wants to be
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the largest think tank in the world
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on the youth’s transition
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to an independent active life.
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How does this work?
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Well, it starts by exploring the transition space.
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And that means sharing what we are doing
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as we build our lives,
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learning from each other,
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and figuring out together what to do next.
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There is a gaming element.
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Society’s typically not generous with rewards
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for young people’s efforts,
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but we think it’s important to honour them.
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So we do it with points and stuff like that.
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The second step is to aggregate
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the individual journeys into common solutions,
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generate a policy vision,
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and bring it to the attention
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of the European and national authorities.
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The space where we do all this
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is an interactive online platform
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called EdgeRyders,
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developed here at the Council of Europe,
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based on free software.
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EdgeRyders is designed to be scalable.
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So whether you’re a regional government,
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a local authority,
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a private or third-sector organisation,
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if you care about this problem,
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please come see us
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and we’ll discuss possible partnerships.
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Meanwhile, good luck with your journey.