Poverty Reduction among Youth in Cambodia: Developing Youth Volunteer Skill Sets for Increased Employability

Creating additional opportunities for Cambodian youth to build skills, exchange expertise and improve employment opportunities through volunteer work

Challenges

In Cambodia, young people (under 25?years of age) make up the majority of the population, with 20.6?percent between the ages of 15 and 24?years. While this demographic trend creates opportunities, there are also challenges. One of the county’s major socio-economic challenges is to create decent and productive employment opportunities for an estimated 300,000?new entrants to the labour market every year while ensuring that young people have access to skills, quality education and business training. 

Acquiring transferable skills will improve access to employment opportunities for young people. To take advantage of the ASEAN Economic Community and the free flow of skilled labour in specific trades, Cambodia must quickly capitalize on its youth population and demographic dividend. Improving skills has also been identified as the country’s greatest challenge to trade expansion.

Toward a Solution

Funded by Brazil, India and South Africa (the IBSA Fund), the project entitled ‘Poverty reduction among youth in Cambodia: Development of youth volunteer skill sets for increased employability’ was led by United Nations Volunteers (UNV) programme and?implemented in partnership with the Cambodian Ministry of?Education, Youth and Sport (MoEYS). The aim of the project is to increase the ability of Cambodian youth to build skills and find decent work through volunteerism, as well as to reduce poverty by contributing to their own development and the economic development of their?country. 

The methodology followed a participatory approach from design to implementation. The Government led national consultations with key stakeholders from the public and private sectors, academia, civil society organizations and the United Nations in order to design a project with a holistic approach. The project was divided into three goals: to 

  • strengthen national capacity to create an enabling policy environment for volunteerism and its recognition; to  
  • promote the engagement and inclusion of vulnerable youth in volunteerism as a means of developing employable skills; and to focus on  
  • advocacy, information and monitoring to implement volunteer management mechanisms. 

Fostering cross-country transfer of knowledge, the?project team received 16?on-site volunteers?from countries in the global North and South, including Cambodia, China, India, the Republic of Korea and Thailand, and mobilized 2,400?local youth volunteers.2 Of the 16?on-site volunteers, 11 are national volunteers from Cambodia and 6 are women. One volunteer from China?contributed?his information and communications technology expertise?to build the ‘Youth Volunteer for Cambodia’ online platform, through which hundreds of young people have access to volunteer information and opportunities. 

The ‘Youth Volunteer for Cambodia’ online platform is managed by MoEYS. Although still in its infancy, it will continue to benefit thousands of young people across the country, which is evidence of the sustainable impacts of the project. 

Innovative project activities included an assessment of youth centres,?the ‘Volunteering for Community Service’ pilot initiative,?the ‘Volunteering for Social Entrepreneurship’ pilot programme, youth?volunteering and employability activities,?study tours and visit from Indian youth to Cambodia, the ‘Volunteering?during National School Holiday’ pilot programme, an International Volunteer Day, a national forum on volunteerism, and?youth volunteerism?outreach sessions. In addition, there were activities related to thematic workshops, the national Entrepreneurship Day and Dream Magazine. 

Through the project, 14,172?participants were reached.?They have participated in various volunteering programmes that have equipped them with transferable skills in communication, problem-solving, teamwork, presentation, leadership, time management and resource mobilization. 

To ensure sustainability, the project was integrated into the United Nations Joint Programme on Youth Employment in Cambodia. UNV supported activities to exchange knowledge on youth empowerment, in collaboration with MoEYS and with support from the Resident Coordinator Office and the United Nations Development Programme. 

In implementing the programme, MoEYS has strengthened its capacities, particularly in provincial youth centres. In 2019, the ‘Volunteer for My Community’ initiative was upscaled to a Government initiative and is being implemented in 12?provinces across Cambodia. It has benefited over 200?youth volunteers who have provided assistance to communities, including 2,396?young people, both in and out of school.  

The Government has contributed US$85,400 to the ‘Volunteer for My Community’ initiative for training and monitoring, and local communities in each province have also provided support, with an estimated total of $38,912.  

The Government has already committed to upscaling the initiative to reach 17?provinces in 2020.  

South-South knowledge exchange allowed participants to share experiences in implementing the project with counterparts in other developing countries. The project was highly praised by the four participating countries (China, India, the Republic of Korea and Thailand) that conducted exchange programmes during the project period. It leverages the unique value of volunteering to provide solutions for countries facing the challenges of a growing youth population. Volunteerism is an important education and training tool to increase youth employability, and youth volunteer efforts benefit both the people in the community and the stakeholder institutions involved in the process. The project’s interventions have helped young people reach their full potential. According to an online survey of 137?youth volunteers, 52?of them (38?percent) were employed at the end of the project period. Among those 52?volunteers, 79?percent felt that they had received their job as a result of having participated in the project’s volunteer activities. In addition to improved employability, a small but significant minority of volunteers indicated that they had become leaders in the making while working with communities. Finally, the project’s organization and setting were robust and flexible, allowing for an immediate response to challenges as they arose. 

CONTACT INFORMATION
Ms. Shalina Miah, Regional Manager for Asia and the Pacific, United Nations Volunteers (UNV) Programme
SDG
04 - Quality Education
SUPPORTED BY
United Nations Volunteers (UNV) Programme, IBSA Fund

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