Shifting priorities: changes in youth development practice post first generation youth policy
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2008
TITLE AUTHOR(S): S.Panday, L.Richter
KEYWORDS: DEVELOPMENT, YOUTH, YOUTH POLICY INITIATIVE
Intranet: HSRC Library: shelf number 5387
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/5299
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/5299
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
-
Related Research Outputs:
- Bridging the research policy divide: YPI in SA
- The bilateral agreement on youth development in community arts centres in post-apartheid South Africa: an impact assessment of the Batsha-Jeugd programme
- The state of youth in South Africa: social dynamics
- Social insecurity, youth and development issues in Kenya
- Youth work in South Africa
- The youth bulge and the future of South Africa
- The youth bulge and the future of South Africa
- Youth development modalities and sustainable livelihoods: Policy and implementation perspectives on the National Rural Youth Services Corps (NARYSEC) Programme
- Youth development modalities and sustainable livelihoods: Policy and implementation perspectives on the National Rural Youth Services Corps (NARYSEC) Programme: exploring the relationship between spatial inequality and attitudes to inequality in South Africa
- Suicidal ideation and associated factors among students aged 13-15 years in Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member states, 2007-2013
- Youth of the global south and why they are worth studying
- National youth policy 2020-2030 draft: A decade to accelerate positive youth development outcomes
- Navigational capacities for southern youth in adverse contexts
- A southern charter for a global youth studies to benefit the world
- Researching the south on its own terms as a matter of justice
- Global south youth studies, its forms and differences among the south, and between the north and south
- Who is in the driving seat?: development cooperation and democracy
- The contested state of democracy in South Africa
- Knowledge-based aid: a four agency comparative study
- Sida, knowledge, learning and capacity