YOUTH INFRASTRUTURE.The establishment of social program requires the development of relevant legislation, administrative support and delivery system. In essence, the government must set up youth centers across the country staffed with social workers, youth counselors, special needs teachers, equipped with computers and games to deliver programs that support our youth in their endeavour to grow and develop as healthy adults. These centers would provide alternative education for students that have difficulty with the mainstream education system. The center would also provide counseling, health information like HIV/AIDS to high-risk youths, juvenile offenders, run-away youth and homeless youth.
By providing these programs to support vocational training, emotional needs and career counseling etc for our youth, our young people to live responsible within their communities. The centres would also help our youth learn about positive social interaction with their peers and adults, help them identify their role models and prevent antisocial behaviors.
SKILLS CENTRES.
Skills Centres would help the unemployed youth facing barriers to employment develop extensive skills and work experience they need to succeed in the labour market. For example, the government could pass a legislation that would compel all state institutions like the Hospitals, District Assemblies etc to recruit student volunteers to enhance the educational and employment skills of our youth. The private sector could also be encouraged to participate in similar activities. Volunteer employment would help our youth develop competencies such as responsibility, desire to succeed and personal recognition, expand their knowledge, increase their communication and negotiation skills.
CULTURAL EXCHANGE PROGRAMS.
This would also enable our youth to travel across the country to learn about other regions, cultures and, tribes and help their social integration. This would not only foster healthy cultural understanding but also enhance tribal tolerance and peaceful existence as a nation.
CONCLUSION.
Many Ghanaians recognizes that youth problems in the country are numerous and complicated. Yet, they have become accustomed to seeing the hopelessness, the hunger, anger and the frustration written on the faces of our young people that they are desensitized and no longer pays attention to their solutions.
And despite the rhetoric about improving the well being of our youth, the state also remains indifference through acts of commission and omission to address to needs of our young people.
What is required now is plan of action to shift the policy fragmentation to policy coordination and to erect new youth development structures, build new partnerships to address the problems inhibiting our youth’s ability to reach their full potentials. Policy objectives must not be expressed in general policy language, but in specific and precise language as to what, how, where and when services would be delivered.
There is certainly a widespread conception in the popular and the scholarly mind alike that, the problems facing our youth can only be resolved upon attainment of economic and social advancement. While the attraction of such a construct is valid and legitimate, it pushes some simple and immediate solutions that can be implemented into the periphery waiting for economic miracle to happen. However, lest no forget, the devil finds work for the idle hands and a word to the wise is enough.




