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Together for Children and Young People in Ireland

Towards a New Governance Framework

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EU Funded Note

Ireland has shown a strong commitment to addressing child poverty and improving outcomes for children and young people. Responding to the needs of children and young people, particularly those most vulnerable, requires integrated policies and services. This report is part of a joint project between the OECD and the European Commission to strengthen policy and governance arrangements for tackling child poverty and improving outcomes for children and young people based on a whole-of-government approach.

The report assesses recent policy, institutional and legislative developments in Ireland and compares outcomes for children and young people with those in other EU and OECD countries. It finds that despite progress, Ireland still has room for improvement on child poverty reduction, and more can be done to address the trust gap between young people in Ireland and their government. The report recommends Ireland to adopt measures to enhance inter-departmental and inter-agency co-operation, strengthen evidence-informed approaches, reinforce policy monitoring tools, and improve accountability mechanisms. It also recommends measures to support the effective implementation of Young Ireland, the National Policy Framework for Children and Young People (2023-28), and to ensure policy coherence.

English

Implications for the governance arrangements underpinning Young Ireland and policy coherence in Ireland’s child and youth policy context

This chapter analyses the development of Young Ireland, Ireland’s National Policy Framework for Children and Young People (0-24) 2023-2028 through a benchmarking exercise employing the eight principles of the OECD Framework for National Youth Strategies. The analysis sheds light on the extent to which the governance arrangements of Young Ireland can be considered evidence-based, participatory, resourced, transparent and accessible, accountable, cross-sectoral, responsive to the needs of vulnerable groups, and supported by high-level political commitment. It also discusses current practice and potential to streamline the governance arrangements underpinning DCEDIY-led constituent strategies, including but not limited to First 5 and the European Child Guarantee National Action Plan, to foster policy coherence.

English

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