Sunday, June 14, 2015

STEEDMAN APPROACH NEEDED TO TACKLE YOUTH ISSUES

 
With  youth unemployment a  massive problem in Australia , the  following article by Paul McDonald , chief executive of Anglicare  and former head of the Children,Youth and Family Division of the Department of Human Resources , said former  ALP politician   Pete  Steedman , above, understood youth, but  modern-day politicians  just  don't seem  to  get  it .

The  critical article was  headed   Federal advocate for youth could shape progressive, responsive policy  and  went  thus:

I remember the time I met Pete Steedman​, when he was the federal member for Casey. It was in the 1980s. I was a youth worker in a drop-in centre when he walked in. Alighting from a red Ford Mustang, sporting a black leather jacket with customary shades and cigarette hanging out of the mouth, Steedman strode through a maze of young people and said to me, "F--k mate, no one up in Canberra understands these young people". 
"Get a load of this guy," I remember thinking. A swearing smoking rock'n'roll-style federal politician telling me how young people are misunderstood and governments have to make sure young people are noticed. Young people could well do with a federal pollie like that on their side these days.
Both sides of politics seem to ignore young people as a cohort. The aged, young families and the disabled have some policy theme to them, but governments impose policy on young people rather than shape policy for them. Yet the big issues confronting government - religious radicalisation, ice, unemployment, housing affordability - are predominantly issues of youth. 
Our political ranks are populated from the less colourful, more machined array of political staffers, union officials or opinionated lawyers who seek political power. This is hardly the gene pool for an advocate for youth.Sure, governments have created commissioners for such tasks. The recently established Children and Young Persons Commissioner and the individual state commissioners may play a part in advice to governments of the day, but these are small offices with few resources and less ability to infiltrate the machinery of policy development in government.

 
Declining Voice

The declining voice for the young person and their development shows. Recent decisions to impose a waiting period for income benefits for 18 to 30-year-olds, the scrapping of the national Youth Connect Program, the lack of political effort to tackle rising numbers of youth unemployment, and the general lack of interest in policies on youth transitions shows the need for a greater understanding of this part of the population. We do much better at finding out the needs of the aged, or women, or the young family.
 
The growing concern about young people coming under the influence of radical elements, however horrifying, must be seen in the context of an instinctive tendency among young people to become attached to anti-establishment concepts. New guidelines recently set down for psychologists are based on the understanding that adolescence effectively ends at the age of 25. The change follows developments in our understanding of emotional maturity, self-image, judgment, hormonal development and brain activity. 
If we accept this science, then right up to their mid-20s the young are developing human beings, inclined to make immature and rash decisions on a myriad of life events. However, governments seem to have a much more simplistic view: once you reach 18 you are an adult and should accept the full consequences of this status.  
Now governments are sharpening their pencils to craft policies that have dire consequences for this age group if allowed to go ahead. Long jail terms for fraternising with radical groups, removing citizenship if they travel to fight overseas with IS, even the movement by governments on one-punch legislation with mandatory sentences of 10 years are commonplace. Other measures leave unaccompanied minors arriving by boat to languish in detention centres or fend for themselves with no links to work or school. 
 
Australia in Minority


Australia is among a minority of countries that does not have a national youth policy or a federal youth minister. Britain has for some time now recognised the perils and implications of ignoring its youth and has appointed a Minister for Youth - as have the Kiwis, Irish, French and Canadians.Such a minister could bring a spotlight on these issues without being blindsided by other agendas, and bring poise and expertise to inform reactive policies (or just plain wild political ideas) that can affect the young adult so significantly.

Young people are mature enough to know when they are being ignored. They know when they are not being heard or noticed. They will make their own choices and seek more welcoming circles regardless of the danger that lurks therein.The fundamental challenge of any youth-focused issue is to make sure our youth feel they belong - in a world that has, typically, little time or focus on their concerns, apart from, of course, when things go wrong.

A youth minister would go a long way to fixing that. I think Pete Steedman would have given that the thumbs up ... and uttered a celebratory expletive. 
 
NOTE: While strongly campaigning against the Vietnam War,Steedman especially opposed  sending young conscripts to fight ;  trail  blazed the  idea of centres of  education also lining up jobs for graduates ; was mockingly called "King of the Kids" because of  his interest in youth issues ; reduced  youth  unemployment in his electorate  and played a large part  in  promoting  and expanding  youth  involvement  in  the  music industry.