Wirkungsnachweis aus der Literatur

Mittelfristig (1 bis 5 Jahre)
Mikro (Individuum)
Sozial

enhancement of the youth's social capital

persönliche Entwicklung / Erwerb von sozialen und personalen Kompetenzen

The data suggests that even though the youth workers do not have high status, authority or access to resources, they are able to work to enhance the youth's social capital and to transform, at least at a local level, social institutions and structures in favor of the youth.

Beschreibung der Aktivität

Berosh Acher - in a different mindset
The program was designed to be an all-inclusive program for treating marginalized youth via street youth workers. The youth workers worked in pairs, a man and a woman. They stayed in the streets, hanging out in places where youth gathered during evenings and nights, and established contact with them. Through these relationships, the youth workers were supposed to help the youth decrease their involvement in risky activities and to connect them to local social and educational service.
Israel
2009-2013
average age 16,6 years old
The objective of Berosh Acher is to challenge the status quo regarding marginalized youth by working on two different but compatible levels: the first is the improvement of the youth's psychosocial wellbeing; the other is the reformation of social institutions and structures. This can be seen in the program's practice in three dimensions: 1) the streets as a physical and political position; 2) youth workers' use of counter narrative; and 3) the role that youth workers take as agents of social capital.
teilnehmende Kinder und Jugendliche
Kinder und Jugendliche mit Migrationserfahrung

Evaluierung der Aktivität

The evaluation study employed both quantitative and qualitative data collection research tools. A detailed evaluation of the outcomes of the program is provided elsewhere (Lavie-Ajayi & Krumer-Nevo, 2011; Note: This is a secondary source. For more information, please check the bibliography of Lavie-Ajayi Krumer-Nevo 2013). Specifically, it is based on 94 repeated semi-structured, in-depth interviews with project youth workers, the project's management staff and key figures in the communities and on 10 participant observations on site and in training and management team meetings.
112 young people
2009-2012