Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Acceptable Jobs and the Epidemic of Youth Unemployment in Southern Italy
- 3 No Jobs, No Hope: The Future of Youth Employment in Spain
- 4 Dirigisme Pour L’Ordinaire: Vocational Training in 21st Century France
- 5 Educating Youth for Future Unemployment in Greece
- 6 Labor Market Policies to Fight Youth Unemployment in Portugal: Between Statism and Experimentalism
- 7 Adaptability of the German Vocational Model to Mediterranean Countries
- 8 US Style Entrepreneurship as a Pathway to Youth Employment: Exporting the Promise
- 9 Grading the Implementation Prospects: Where Do We Go from Here?
- Index
1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 April 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Acceptable Jobs and the Epidemic of Youth Unemployment in Southern Italy
- 3 No Jobs, No Hope: The Future of Youth Employment in Spain
- 4 Dirigisme Pour L’Ordinaire: Vocational Training in 21st Century France
- 5 Educating Youth for Future Unemployment in Greece
- 6 Labor Market Policies to Fight Youth Unemployment in Portugal: Between Statism and Experimentalism
- 7 Adaptability of the German Vocational Model to Mediterranean Countries
- 8 US Style Entrepreneurship as a Pathway to Youth Employment: Exporting the Promise
- 9 Grading the Implementation Prospects: Where Do We Go from Here?
- Index
Summary
I would like to begin this book on youth unemployment in Europe and America with a personal story. I emigrated from India to the US in the early 1980s as a young bride, barely out of my teens, with an undergraduate degree in economics; I also had developed skills in shorthand and typing. Within weeks of coming to America, I was able to find employment as a project secretary in a major research university, a place where I subsequently rose to the level of full professor. While I no doubt worked hard earning an undergraduate degree in business, a graduate degree in statistics and a doctoral degree in demography and public affairs along the way – and all while raising a family, I credit a good bit of my upward career mobility to an opportunity structure that gave primacy to merit. I do not have a proper counterfactual of course, but I do firmly believe that my career progression would not have followed the same path had I remained in India – and I say this with the utmost respect and love for my birth country. Despite the risk of sounding cliché-ish, I have indeed come to see America as a ‘land of opportunity’ and have personally experienced the results of what Alexis de Tocqueville labeled ‘America's self-interest rightly understood’.
Another characteristic that is quintessentially American, risk-taking, has also seeped into my psychological makeup and has manifested itself in the many decisions I have made for myself and my family. One professional example of this free-wheeling entrepreneurial spirit is my founding with my longtime colleague and mentor, Michael J. Camasso, of a successful STEM education program called Nurture thru Nature (NtN), designed to benefit disadvantaged students. Selfinterest rightly understood, risk-taking and personal achievement also took me to Germany, aided by a Fulbright scholarship. In retrospect, I find it very hard to believe that after leading a rather sheltered life well into my 30s I ventured out to a country where I knew no one, didn't speak the language, nor knew its customs and practices. Nevertheless, the experience was splendidly rewarding, and I saw firsthand how the German dual education system connected relatively seamlessly with the labor market producing young school leavers with highly marketable skills.
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- The Growing Challenge of Youth Unemployment in Europe and AmericaA Cross-Cultural Perspective, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021