Together for Children and Young People in Ireland
Towards a New Governance Framework
Ireland has shown a strong commitment to addressing child poverty and improving outcomes for children and young people. Responding to the needs of children and young people, particularly those most vulnerable, requires integrated policies and services. This report is part of a joint project between the OECD and the European Commission to strengthen policy and governance arrangements for tackling child poverty and improving outcomes for children and young people based on a whole-of-government approach.
The report assesses recent policy, institutional and legislative developments in Ireland and compares outcomes for children and young people with those in other EU and OECD countries. It finds that despite progress, Ireland still has room for improvement on child poverty reduction, and more can be done to address the trust gap between young people in Ireland and their government. The report recommends Ireland to adopt measures to enhance inter-departmental and inter-agency co-operation, strengthen evidence-informed approaches, reinforce policy monitoring tools, and improve accountability mechanisms. It also recommends measures to support the effective implementation of Young Ireland, the National Policy Framework for Children and Young People (2023-28), and to ensure policy coherence.
Accountability for child and youth well-being policy in Ireland
This chapter analyses the broader governance arrangements which aim to ensure accountability in the field of child and youth policy outcomes in Ireland. It first provides an overview of the legal frameworks underpinning accountability for child and youth policy in the country. It then looks into the institutional responsibilities, capacities, as well as practices to promote various types of accountability, as identified by the previous national policy framework for children and young people “Better Outcomes Brighter Futures 2014-20”, notably political accountability, inter-departmental and non-governmental accountability, accountability to children and young people, financial accountability and public accountability. It highlights opportunities to strengthen institutional reporting and accountability mechanisms and to embed policy monitoring and evaluation within and across layers of government and the whole of the Irish society for more robust results.
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