Difference between revisions of "Campaign:Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region (Youth Initiative)"

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(Created page with "'''<<= back to Campaign''' ''This is the application text we sent to apply for a grant to the "[[Atomic Threats Around the Baltic Sea book project|Atomic Threats...")
 
(the application should not be linked here - Undo revision 71856 by Kardan (talk))
 
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'''[[Campaign|<<= back to Campaign]]'''
 
'''[[Campaign|<<= back to Campaign]]'''
  
''This is the application text we sent to apply for a grant to the "[[Atomic Threats Around the Baltic Sea book project|Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region]]" project for the period from August 3, 2013 to January 20, 2015.''
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''This is the application text we sent to apply for a grant to the "[[Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region|Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region]]" project for the period from August 3, 2013 to January 20, 2015.''
  
 
''We won't publish the personal details of the applicants, partner groups, bank accounts and the sums of the grant on the webpage for data protection reasons.''
 
''We won't publish the personal details of the applicants, partner groups, bank accounts and the sums of the grant on the webpage for data protection reasons.''
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<small>''Application for: '''Action 1 - Youth for Europe. 1.2 - Youth initiatives''' (Version of the application form valid as of 2013)''</small>
 
<small>''Application for: '''Action 1 - Youth for Europe. 1.2 - Youth initiatives''' (Version of the application form valid as of 2013)''</small>
  
==== Part I.  Project identification and summary ====
+
==== Project identification and summary ====
 
===== Name of the applicant =====
 
===== Name of the applicant =====
 
* Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum"
 
* Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum"
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End date of the project: <small>''(date when the last costs incur)''</small>
 
End date of the project: <small>''(date when the last costs incur)''</small>
* 20.01.15
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* 20-01-15
  
  
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The project aims:
 
The project aims:
 
* to promote young people’s active citizenship in general and their European citizenship in particular (YiA-Prio-61)
 
* to promote young people’s active citizenship in general and their European citizenship in particular (YiA-Prio-61)
* to develop solidarity and promote tolerance among young people, in particular in order to foster social cohesion in the
+
* to develop solidarity and promote tolerance among young people, in particular in order to foster social cohesion in the European Union (YiA-Prio-62)
European Union (YiA-Prio-62)
 
 
* to foster mutual understanding between young people in different countries (YiA-Prio-63)
 
* to foster mutual understanding between young people in different countries (YiA-Prio-63)
 
* to promote European cooperation in the youth field (YiA-Prio-65)
 
* to promote European cooperation in the youth field (YiA-Prio-65)
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* "Transnationale Jugendinitiativen sowie Projekte, die aktiv junge Menschen aus anderen Ländern einbeziehen, werden vorrangig gefördert."
 
* "Transnationale Jugendinitiativen sowie Projekte, die aktiv junge Menschen aus anderen Ländern einbeziehen, werden vorrangig gefördert."
 
* "Die Projekte werden deutlich erkennbar von Jugendlichen selbständig initiiert, beantragt und auch durchgeführt."
 
* "Die Projekte werden deutlich erkennbar von Jugendlichen selbständig initiiert, beantragt und auch durchgeführt."
 
 
'''Please explain here how the applied measure will foster the realization of the selected priorities:'''
 
 
The European Citizenship provides possibilities and rights to impact the decision making process of the European societies. Our project will gather concerned young people, help them to exchange their experiences with each other and to develop cooperation activities to raise the puclic awareness of the atomic risks, and to have an impact on the political decisions regarding the use of nuclear power. The International Anti-nuclear Gathering will help the young participants to understand their possibilities as European citizens and to act together to deal with the global ecological and human threats of atomic power.
 
 
The young people involved to the International Anti-nuclear Gathering will take part in the decision making and development of the project from the first moment when they join it. We will promote the gathering as early as possible to give people a chance to join the process from the very beginning. We will provide an email mailing list, Skype conferences and meetings in the non-virtual world to prepare the gathering, to discuss issues and to make decisions for the project together on an emancipated base.
 
 
In the presentations of the situation in their regions, but also in informal talks and as a result of the personal exchange in process of workshops and in the preparation of the activities of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering, the young participants will share their cultural diversity with each other. People will tell about their individual experiences, the political and cultural context in their societies and about challenges they are faced at home.
 
 
The International Anti-nuclear Gathering will take place in Döbeln, Middle Saxony, in a rural area. The local promoter Greenkids established a project house their and is currently developing cooperations and projects with local organizations and young people. The gathering will involve residents and give young people the chance to learn about other cultures, provide them possibilities to take part in the society and to make friends with participants from other countries to stay in touch with them in future. The project will have a positive impact of the charitable work of Greenkids in the region, and it will provide a new field of activities to the local networks.
 
 
Follow-up projects are proposed to be developed between local people and organizations and the international participants of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering. The gathering as well as the results and the follow-up projects will be promoted in local media and to young people through flyers, postcards and posters. We will also establish contacts to local organizations to motivate them to take part in the events.
 
 
As some of the organizers of the event as activists of Greenkids and other partner groups are unemployed or are faced to disadvantages caused by school dropout, this project offers them a possibility to take part in social activities, to develop their personality and skills to increase their future chances in life. Due to this experience we also encourage our partner groups to particularly invite disadvantaged young people to take the chance of this project, and we will figure out specific challenges of these people to join the gathering and develop solutions to give them the same chances as any other regular participant of the event.
 
  
  
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'''Operational capacity:'''
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==== Operational capacity ====
 
Many of the young project organizers have been active in the anti-nuclear field already. This project gathers people who have investigation experiences. Access to background knowledge will provided by the promoters, through the Nuclear Heritage Network we are involved to, online in the internet, and through "freedom of information" requests to the responsible authorities.
 
Many of the young project organizers have been active in the anti-nuclear field already. This project gathers people who have investigation experiences. Access to background knowledge will provided by the promoters, through the Nuclear Heritage Network we are involved to, online in the internet, and through "freedom of information" requests to the responsible authorities.
  
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==== Part II.  Applicant ====
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==== Applicant ====
 
===== A Information on the applicant =====
 
===== A Information on the applicant =====
 
* name: Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum"
 
* name: Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum"
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==== Part III.  Partner promoter(s) ====
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==== Partner promoter(s) ====
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
  
  
==== Part IV.  Participants in the project ====
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==== Participants in the project ====
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
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<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
(Basically we say that from each promoter four young people in the age between 18 and 25 and two "group leaders" of any age will be sent. The age of the young participants is a bit flexible - it couls also be young up to 13, or in exceptional cases up to 30. The gender of participants as well as of "group leaders" have to be balanced.)
 
 
* number of participants: 40
 
* number of group leaders: 20
 
* total number: 60
 
  
 +
* number of Austrian participants: 4
 +
* number of Finnish participants: 5
 +
* number of Latvian participants: 4
 +
* number of Lithuanian participants: 6
 +
* number of Netherlands participants: 4
 +
* number of Polish participants: 4
 +
* number of German participants: 8
 +
* total number: 35
  
==== Part V.  Project description ====
+
 
 +
==== Project description ====
 
===== Objectives and priorities =====
 
===== Objectives and priorities =====
 
''Please explain the context, the origin and the objectives of your project and in which way it meets the objectives and the priorities of
 
''Please explain the context, the origin and the objectives of your project and in which way it meets the objectives and the priorities of
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===== European dimension =====
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===== European dimension =====
Please indicate if and how your project reflects the following characteristics:
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''Please indicate if and how your project reflects the following characteristics; tick box(es) and then describe:''
* the project fosters young people’s sense of European citizenship and helps them to understand their role as part of the present and future of Europe;
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* ''The project fosters young people's sense of European citizenship and helps them to understand their role as part of the
* the project reflects a common concern for European society, such as racism, xenophobia and anti-semitism, drug abuse…;
+
present and future of Europe (YiA-Prio-81)''
* the project’s theme is linked to EU topics, such as EU enlargement, the roles and activities of the European institutions, the EU's action in matters affecting young people;
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* ''The project reflects a common concern for European society, such as racism, xenophobia and anti-semitism, drug abuse...
* the project debates the founding principles of the EU, i.e. principles of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, and the rule of law.
+
(YiA-Prio-82)''
 
+
* ''The project's theme is linked to EU topics, such as EU enlargement, the roles and activities of the European institutions,
 
+
the EU's action in matters affecting young people (YiA-Prio-83)''
Young people are probably the most active part of society. Teen years are also a period when person’s habits and preferences stabilize. Because of that, it is important to involve young people in exchange programmes, dedicated to environmental protection and educate about the ecological situation of our planet. After some years, these teenagers will become adult, find a job, chose their lifestyle and they may play a serious role in the future of our planet. Today people and regions are connected more than ever and that is what needs to be explained for people – why we need to care about things like water pollution in other countries, nuclear waste in eastern Europe, building new nuclear power plants in northern Europe. One of the aims of the gathering is to explain to the participants that anyone of them can play a role in the present and future of their region and Europe as well. Everyone is important because big things usually start from small steps.
+
* ''The project debates the founding principles of the EU, i.e. principles of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights and
 +
fundamental freedoms, and the rule of law (YiA-Prio-84)''
  
Through the International Anti-nuclear Gathering the participants will learn to understand environmental and social challenges in certain regions of Europe. They will come in contact with active people who are working on these issues and learn about the society and politicial decision making. They will get to know and partly practise methods to reach other people, reach the public and how to make an impact on issues of the society. As part of an international youth exchange they will understand themselves as young Europeans and they will find out how they can influence their future and environment as European citizens. While they discuss the local and global challenges of nuclear power and develop projects together, they will realize their role as a part of the present and future of Europe.
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Today and tomorrow of the European Union will depend on youth. Today, using active participation and speaking about their concerns, they can already influence things and realize their potential and power. In future as new adults they can continue things started in their teenage years and it is very likely that people who have been politically and socially active during their youth will remain active later.
  
Nuclear power is a basic mainstay of the European Union due to the EURATOM treaty, it is also a common concern for the European society, because many European countries use nuclear power and the environmental and health effects become understood better every year. The impact of the nuclear facilities and developments across Europe show strongly that radiation does not stop at national borders and that even countries withour nuclear power are harmed by it. There are transnational treaties intended to protect the people from pollution e.g. from nuclear power plants and nuclear waste dumping. In many European countries huge parts of the society take an active part in the struggle about the future development of energy supplies and many NGOs and citizens fight against nuclear power. One example showing strongly nuclear threats to be a common concern for the European society is the “Anti Nuclear European Forum (ANEF)” that has been founded in summer 2009 as an European platform of NGOs, which is supposed to gather again in spring or summer 2012. The International Anti-nuclear Gathering reflects this common concern with its main themes and by its activities throughout the youth exchange.
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This project is a chance to make the first youth created encyclopedia about all nuclear facilities around the Baltic Sea, a tool that will give the reader both a brief overview and a material for reference, and could be used for years. It is, in some respect, a unique project and a great chance for carrying out a serious research.
 
 
The EURATOM treaty and the search for final disposal sites for nuclear waste in Europe (EURADWASTE) show that the topics of our project are linked to EU topics. Some European institutions play an important role in this field, e.g. regarding the estimation of the health effects of nuclear power plants or to nuclear research activities. The decisions done by EU institutions have of course a big impact on young people as their future is threatened by the ionizing radiation released by nuclear facilities during the regular operation, by the immediate and long-term impacts of nuclear accidents that occure time after time as Fukushima showed strongly last year, by the destruction of large areas for uranium mining including the pollution of the environment and contamination of people living there, and by the insoluble problem of the final disposal of long-term radioactive waste.
 
 
 
Even other parts of the European policies have an impact in our main theme: the last last EU enlargements involved some new EU countries into the Union that operated nuclear reactors of the type of the exploded Chernobyl reactor and meant a great danger. As part of the agreement between EU and Lithuania the closure of the old Ignalina NPP was fixed and took place on December 31, 2009. Meanwhile the Lithuanian government aims to build a new atomic power station at the Visaginas site. We will as well stress the nuclear policies of the “new” EU members as those of “old” EU countries during our youth exchange and discuss with our participants what impact they have for the environment and society in these regions and for their neighbours.
 
 
 
In this connection we will also debate founding principles of the EU like democratic participation in decision making, human rights like the right for health and life violated by the atomic threats, and the questioning of fundamental freedoms in certain regions of Europe if citizens oppose to the nuclear policies of their governments. Also the rule of law will be a topic to discuss if we talk e.g. about offences against nuclear safety regulations by atomic companies for example in Finland during the construction of the “new” European Pressurized Water Reactor (EPR) in Olkiluoto. In other cases the legal regulations in Finland are still so undefined that uranium companies fight with the government about the question whether or not they need a permission for uranium drilling by the authorities. The (national and European) law and its meaning in the struggle about nuclear threats will be a topic debated at several points of the youth exchange.
 
  
  
 
===== Impact, multiplying effect and follow-up =====
 
===== Impact, multiplying effect and follow-up =====
The participants of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering will learn about the impacts of nuclear power and about opportunities for participation in decision making processes and about the different cultures the participants are descended of. They will develop their awareness to be European citizens and they will step in intercultural dialogue with people from other countries. Throughout the youth exchange they will train their practical and social skills, learn to organize events, to create and produce materials and how to communicate with people on the streets, with authorities and politicians.
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''Please explain the expected impact on young participants and the local communities involved in the project and what measures are foreseen to attain this impact. Furthermore, please describe the planned measures aimed at recognizing and validating the learning outcomes of participants and promoters involved in the project. In a long term perspective, please describe how you plan to achieve a multiplier effect and sustainable impact. Please also explain how you plan to follow up this project (e.g. new projects within the framework of the Youth in Action Programme, continuous contact with the promoter(s), etc.)?''
  
The International Anti-nuclear Gathering will take place in in a rural area. The local promoter established a project house their and is currently developing cooperations and projects with local organizations and young people. The gathering will involve residents and give young people the chance to learn about other cultures, provide them possibilities to take part in the society and to make friends with participants from other countries to stay in touch with them in future. The project will have a positive impact of the charitable work of Greenkids in the region, and it will provide a new field of activities to the local networks.
+
The participants will have taken part in a large scale project, whose results will be widely distributed and which will not lose its importance and topicality for many years. Also they will have improved their research and journalism skills. During this project, participants will collect large amount of information, far more then they will actually need for the project purposes. This information, that will also contain useful data, can be used for other projects, researches, articles, presentations or simply be shared among anti-nuclear activists.
  
The local community in Döbeln will benefit from the practical support they will get from the gathering when we all work together on the preparation of the events and they will have the chance to increase their impacts to the public with the projects they usually work on, because the visit of an international group will earn much more public attention than usual work, and as it is connected to them they will benefit from it. People living in the region will get more knowledge about the topics we will talk about and some of them will become encouraged by us to become active citizens and to take a stand in the struggle about polluting the environment.
+
The follow-up of this project will most likely be continuous contact with the promoters and a new project. This time it could be a project that involves seminars and discussions with the public on such topics as atomic policy, threats to health, environment and economics caused by nuclear power, renewable energy. At the moment it is difficult to say which countries could be involved in such a project.
  
The International Anti-nuclear Gathering aims not only to have the mentioned short-term effects (informing people about our theme, supporting local activists), but also to develop a network of active people that will remain even afterwards. The gathering is supposed to help to come in contact with activists from several groups (not only our local promoters) and to learn about their work. Throughout the youth exchange we want to start projects together or to join projects of the groups we will come in contact with. Thus the youth exchange will be a basis for future cooperation and follow-up projects. It will be the basis to develop a network of young people interested in protecting the environment.
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Already now we have some more concrete follow-up projects in mind to result from the "Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region" project: an exhibition on atomic facilities and protests in the Baltic Sea area, and a new info tour around the sea similar to the 2010 one which inspired our project of today (but shorter and more focused). Further project ideas will appear during the time until the end of 2014, after producing our first materials based on investigations we made. We will utilize the project meetings we will organize to consider on follow-up projects, too.
  
Many of the materials we will develop within the project (e.g. flyers about general nuclear issues and special topics) will later be used by our local promoters for there activities. We will publish as much as possible on our website to provide a good knowledge about the impacts of nuclear facilitie, about travelling and doing events other countries and about the activities of people and groups we will have got to know during the youth exchange.
 
  
Most of the follow-ups we will develop during the International Anti-nuclear Gathering haven't been discussed yet. We want to create space for spontaneous ideas and cooperation with the participants of the youth exchange. For that issue we will use the workshops to develop certain project ideas and the evaluation workshops at the end of the youth exchange to make the tasks for the future activities clear. A few ideas already exist: e.g. youth exchanges in some of the participating countries to spend more time at one place and to learn more about those places; network meetings to develop a network of young active people; an international exhibition project about uranium mining that should be shown in several countries. These concrete ideas have been mentioned by some of our partner groups when we wrote the application for the itinerant youth exchange, but most follow-ups will be created during the project itself.
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===== Visibility =====
 +
''Apart from the compulsory use of the Programme Logo (cfr. Part C, Publicity, of the Programme Guide), please describe:''
 +
* ''how you will ensure the visibility of the project''
 +
* ''how your project will provide clear promotional added value for the Youth in Action Programme.''
  
In the context of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering we see the “Nuclear Heritage Network”, a project created by the German partner group and developed within the YOUTH programme and YOUTH IN ACTION over the last years. Through this network project we will establish and develop our contacts and start new activities together with our partner groups.
+
The visibility of the project will be ensured in several ways: press releases will be written and sent to media in all partner countries. The first press release will be made shortly before the project will start. We plan to make several press releases during the project informing about state of affairs and project activities, such as information events. The last press release will be made shortly after the end of the project, informing about the project results.
  
 +
Information about the project and project updates will also be sent to NukeNews and grünes blatt. NukeNews is  a multilingual (English, German, Czech, Finnish, French, Russian, Lithuanian) system of newsletters that informs about atomic policies and developments, anti-nuclear campaigns and actions. grünes blatt is ...
  
===== Youthpass =====
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Also information about the project will be distributed among anti-nuclear groups in different countries (all partner countries, other) via e-mail. During the project, when we will have collected and processed information, several information events will be organized in all partner countries. These events could be organized in two ways: as interactive open air events with an info tent and some creative activities (performances, short plays, games, etc.) or as formal events with presentations and discussions. The latter ones could take place, for instance, in ministries of environment, European Union information centers or in informal youth gathering places.
'''Will the participants receive a youthpass as an appreciation for their participation and learning success? (www.youthpass.eu)''' - yes
 
  
 +
A project flyer will also be made. It will be available both in electronic and printed versions. PDF flyer will be available for dowload on the Nuclear Heritage Network, while printed version will be sent to all project partners for distribution in their countries. The flyer will be prepared before the first information events so it could be distributed there. The printed version will be available "on demand" for other organizations in the partner countries/organizations from other countries, too. Completed researches and links to additional materials (reports, official statements, articles in press, videos, etc.) will be published on the Nuclear Heritage Network, http://www.nuclear-heritage.net, which connects anti-nuclear activists worldwide, provide information regarding nuclear issues and anti-nuclear activities in many countries.
  
===== Visibility =====
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In the final stage of the project the book "Atomic Threats Around the Baltic Sea" will be published. The book will be printed in size A5 and consist of two parts. The first part will include background articles on radioactive pollution of the Baltic Sea and impacts of the Chernobyl Disaster. The second part of the book will be dedicated to countries around the Baltic Sea (including Belarus as it is a part of the sea's water shed) and will be divided into chapters (one chapter for a country). Chapters will consist of an introduction to national atomic policy and current state of affairs. Each article on an atomic facility will include a photo of it or of the area, an introduction to the plant, technical details, contact information of active anti-nuclear groups and links to websites of critics and operators. At the end an appendix will show the names of proposed sites for uranium exploration and mining.
We will promote our project internationally to find participants and supporters for the International Anti-nuclear Gathering and because we want to use this project to increase the public awareness about the threats of nuclear power. For this issue we will create posters and flyers, we will write emails and send them to networks of interested people and we will do public relations work to reach the media interest for our youth exchange. For several local activities (like the presentations on the atomic situation in certain countries) we will invite the media, write press releases and usually we will also print flyers or posters to get public attention. Thus the project will be visible by the activities we will do.
 
  
All participants of the youth exchange will be informed about the funding by the YOUTH IN ACTION programme and many of them will start their own projects under this programme when we develop the follow-up projects. The financial support of the European Union will be mentioned in our PR work and the big number of organizations we will cooperate with will get to know the opportunities provided by Youth in Action, too. The promotional added value for the Youth in Action Programme will be realized by enlarging the number of people and organizations that know about it and by the new projects that will be developed by the International Anti-nuclear Gathering that will be realized with the programme, too.
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The promotial value for the Youth in Action Programme will be ensured by the large amount of people this project will address and its many activities. By seeing the Programme logo on the materials, which we will produce, for instance, flyers, the book people can be inspired to make their own Youth in Action project.
  
  
 
===== Dissemination and exploitation of results =====
 
===== Dissemination and exploitation of results =====
During the youth exchange we will have regular feedback circles to get feedback from all participants about their impressions, needs and suggestions to improve the project.  
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''Please give a detailed description of standard measures planned with a view to disseminating and exploiting the results of the project.''<br/>
 +
''(For inspiration, please see Part B - How to develop a good project? of the Programme Guide)''
  
Parts of the workshops and events of the youth exchange will be evaluated directly afterwards. These evaluations won't be done by the whole group, but by the small working groups that worked on certain tasks.
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Exploitation of the results will be done by documenting our work on the Nuclear Heritage Network, http://www.nuclear-heritage.net, preparing and distributing the flyer and the book, organizing information events and sending informative e-mails to anti-nuclear networks. All of these activities will spread the word on our topics and the results.
  
We will make a documentation of all of our activities – take pictures, collect materials and provide most of this information on our website. We will write some articles about the International Anti-nuclear Gathering and the experiences we will have made.
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Dissemination will be done by reflection and feedback meetings during our face-to-face meetings and by e-mail and Skype at the end of the project.
  
At the end of the youth exchange we will have the evaluation phase. The aim is to gather feedback and criticism of the participants and to discuss about possibilities to make improvements for the next time.
 
  
After the International Anti-nuclear Gathering we will have a phase for the valorization / exploitation of the results of the youth exchange. The agreements about the tasks to be done by the participants and promoters will be done during the evaluation workshops at the end of the youth exchange.
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===== Inclusion of young people with fewer opportunities =====
 +
''Does your project involve young people with fewer opportunities (facing situations that make their inclusion in society more difficult, see main situations/obstacles identified below) and/or special needs (mobility problems, health care, etc.)? If so, please describe and motivate.''
  
For the evaluation and valorization we will make appointments with all involved people to discuss, collect feedback and make agreements about the tasks to be done using our mailing list and Skype conferences.
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Within the applicant's group several young people are involved suffering social and/or economic obstacles, and/or are faced to health and educational differences. One person lives in a socially difficult "ghetto" due to economic problems, one person had problems with drugs in the past and is faced to deal with the consequences, another one had to experience jail and the social impacts this has on their live now. One person cancelled their school education, several others selected alternative educational opportunities due to problems with the normal school. Due to economic disadvantages, some people receive social welfare support. Two of our group members have a gluten intolerance, and being vegans at the same time they need a special costly diet. Four group members live in structurally weak areas making it difficult for them to be mobile.
  
 +
We respond to these disadvantages by supporting indigent group members solidarily with their travel and communication expenses to be able to equally join the project. We also share technical equipment with them/provide technical devices for them from the project. The specific social experiences and differences we meet with a cautious and steady group process giving space to those of us who don't have the same educational or experience background to make everything understandable and joinable for everyone. We will take the time it needs to reflect and discuss the specific experiences people were faced to. To include the persons with health problems, we will provide the specific food they need, although it is a bit more expensive.
  
'''Do you plan additional activities of dissemination and exploitation of results or follow-up projects?''' - yes ''(in the application wrong: no, but correction sent by email)''
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Our Eastern project participants are historically faced to specific geographic and cultural differences, particularly the young people from Lithuania and Latvia. The Soviet history has impacted their society regarding economic and social conditions and expectations. We have experiences, particularly in every day's project life with each other, that challenges can appear connected to the social and cultural differences. We will take this knowledge into account, and the coach will help us in this respect with their experience, too.
  
For the additional exploitation of the results of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering we will produce a brochure about nuclear issues and active citizenship in European countries involved to the youth exchange. The contents will be supplied by the topics we work on at the International Anti-nuclear Gathering. We will learn about local organizations and their activities and projects as well as about the threats of nuclear facilities and developments. During the youth exchange we will collect this information and materials (e.g. pictures, interviews) for this brochure.
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As the form didn't accept the total amount of disadvantaged participants, and only accepted those of the applicant, the figure provided there (4) concerns the applicant only. All together it concerns 14 people.
  
After the youth exchange we will start to work on this brochure. Some people will write articles, some will do investigations to gather more details for it, others will contact organizations and institutions to find out more. At the end of the production of the brochure some people will do the layout of it and give it to a printery. All these tasks will be discussed and divided to the participants of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering at the end during the evaluation workshops.
 
  
Later we will distribute the brochure to interested people throughout Europe. We will write press releases, send emails to networks of interested people and publish it on our website, too. We will inform organizations in Europe that work on familiar topics about the brochure and spread it all over Europe that way.
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''Number of young people with fewer opportunities involved in the project'' '''4'''
  
We will also prepare information events including slide shows, theatrical elements and lectures to present the International Anti-nuclear Gathering project in many European regions. The materials for these information events will also be gathered during the youth exchange and the tasks to be done to prepare it will be discussed in the evaluation workshops at the end of the International Anti-nuclear Gathering. We will make clear a minimal number of participants who want to present these information events in there regions or even internationally and coordinate the first dates of them. Later we will use the Nuclear Heritage Network structures to continue to give these presentations.
 
  
The timetable of the activities can be found in the section about partnership, theme and activities.
+
''Please indicate the situation(s) they face:''
 +
* Social obstacles (YiA-Prio-41)
 +
* Health problems (YiA-Prio-46)
 +
* Economic obstacles (YiA-Prio-42)
 +
* Cultural differences (YiA-Prio-45)
 +
* Educational difficulties (YiA-Prio-44)
 +
* Geographical obstacles (YiA-Prio-47)
  
  
===== Inclusion of young people with fewer opportunities =====
+
==== Details of the Coach ====
In our project we have involved young people having their origin in countries that face various obstacles, culturallly and economically. Historically, in eastern European countries, many young people will face the cultural challenge of not questioning the regime, there is a social and political pressure not to speak out and we will need to cater for this cultural difference by having an expert on board who can help to access and resolve the issues that arise.
+
''If you have a coach accompanying and supporting you with your activities, please provide contact details.''
  
In Poland, Lithuania and Slovenia, the young people face economic challenges which will need to be addressed and solutions found, such as assistance with travel and resources.
+
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
 
 
To assist with the various challenges, we will employ an expert whose skills would be utilized in helping the disadvantaged participants to overcome the challenges faced. Assessment will be used to identify areas within each different group where challenges were apparent and the expert will facilitate introductory workshops to aid social cohesion and overcome inclusion issues. In addition to the workshops the expert will observe, mediate and assist throughout the youth exchange as challenges arose on a day-to-day basis.
 
 
 
As we know from our partner organizations there will be also some participants who canceled their school education and people who are faced with unemployment. We will consider their specific challenges, e.g. if in discussions people expect a certain knowledge they maybe don’t have, and support them to join all parts of the youth exchange as well as other participants.
 
 
 
 
 
''Number of young people with fewer opportunities directly involved in the project:'' '''10'''
 
 
 
 
 
''Please tick the situation(s) they face:''
 
* Educational difficulties (school dropout)
 
* Economic obstacles
 
* Cultural differences
 
* Other  –  please specify: Unemployment
 
  
  
==== Part VI.  Budget ====
+
==== Budget ====
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
  
  
==== Part VII.  Bank details ====
+
==== Bank details ====
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
  
  
==== Part VIII.  Signature of the legal representative ====
+
==== Signature of the legal representative ====
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
  
  
==== Part IX.  Declaration on honour ====
+
==== Declaration on honour ====
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
 
<span class="hervor_yellow">information in the application form only</span>
  
  
 
<small>{{Footnotes}}</small>
 
<small>{{Footnotes}}</small>

Latest revision as of 20:16, 17 November 2013

<<= back to Campaign

This is the application text we sent to apply for a grant to the "Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region" project for the period from August 3, 2013 to January 20, 2015.

We won't publish the personal details of the applicants, partner groups, bank accounts and the sums of the grant on the webpage for data protection reasons.


Application: Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region

Application for: Action 1 - Youth for Europe. 1.2 - Youth initiatives (Version of the application form valid as of 2013)

Project identification and summary

Name of the applicant
  • Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum"


Title of the project
  • Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region


Type of Activity

This project is a Youth initiarive of the following type:

  • Trans-national youth initiative


The applicant is:

  • Applicant Organisation (APP)


Duration of the project

Start date of the project: (date when the first costs incur)

  • 03-08-13


End date of the project: (date when the last costs incur)

  • 20-01-15


Total duration of the project (in days):

  • 536


Venue(s):

  • Döbeln


Relevance to the general objectives of the Youth in Action Programme

The project aims:

  • to promote young people’s active citizenship in general and their European citizenship in particular (YiA-Prio-61)
  • to develop solidarity and promote tolerance among young people, in particular in order to foster social cohesion in the European Union (YiA-Prio-62)
  • to foster mutual understanding between young people in different countries (YiA-Prio-63)
  • to promote European cooperation in the youth field (YiA-Prio-65)


Relevance to the priorities of the Youth in Action Programme

Permanent thematic priorities:

  • Participation of young people (YiA-Prio-2)
  • European Citizenship (YiA-Prio-1)
  • Cultural diversity (YiA-Prio-3)
  • Inclusion (YiA-Prio-4)


Annual priorities:

  • Creativity and entrepreneurship (YiA-Prio-520)
  • EU citizenship and the rights that go with it (YiA-Prio-528)


National priorities:

  • "Das Projekt bezieht Jugendliche mit ein, die im Sinne des §13 SGB VIII sozial benachteiligt und individuell beeinträchtigt sind."
  • "Transnationale Jugendinitiativen sowie Projekte, die aktiv junge Menschen aus anderen Ländern einbeziehen, werden vorrangig gefördert."
  • "Die Projekte werden deutlich erkennbar von Jugendlichen selbständig initiiert, beantragt und auch durchgeführt."


Main themes for the Activity
  • Environment (YiA-Prio-714)
  • European awareness (YiA-Prio-71)


Summary of the project

The Baltic Sea is - according to the data of the HELSINKI COMMISSION, a body of scientists of the states in the Baltic Sea region - the most radioactive inland water body of the world. It was impacted by the nuclear weapons tests of the last century, the Chernobyl disaster of 1986, and by the emissions of the British Sellafield facility. These days the nuclear power stations, waste repositories, atomic transports, and uranium mining projects pose the major pollution risk to the sea and to the people living there. Our project is an international co-operation of concerned young people from countries of the affected region, supported by experienced international partners from the Netherlands and from Austria. It is dedicated to educate on safety concerns, and to spread the word about anti-nuclear initiatives.

The project takes almost 18 months starting in August 2013 and ending in January 2015. It involves some 35 young people from Austria, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, and Poland investigating around the Baltic Sea on atomic facilities, safety concerns and organizations criticizing them. The information and knowledge gathered will be published online and in printed form of flyers and a book. Additionally, information events on the "Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region" will be held in countries around the sea.


Operational capacity

Many of the young project organizers have been active in the anti-nuclear field already. This project gathers people who have investigation experiences. Access to background knowledge will provided by the promoters, through the Nuclear Heritage Network we are involved to, online in the internet, and through "freedom of information" requests to the responsible authorities.

Involved to the "Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region" project are people with different language skills useful for investigations in this region - such as German, English, Russian, but also Latvian, Polish, Lithuanian, or Finnish.

A main part of the investigations and practical work will be done by the participants of the project from home with their own laptops/desktop computers. Additional helpful technical equipment for this work, for project meetings and preparation of reach-out material will be provided by the project house in Mannsdorf, the main project venue of the applicant.

Within our international co-operation several people are experienced with project management, funding applications, bookkeeping, and public relations. Additionally, the coach will support the project with their experiences in the field of group process and methods as well as concerning the bookkeeping.


Composition of the partnership
  • Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum" - Germany
  • AntiNuclear Initiative - Poland
  • Sonne + Freiheit - Austria
  • Wise Minds - Latvia
  • WISE - Netherlands
  • ŽALI.LT - Lithuania
  • Luonto-Liitto - Finland

Total number of partner organizations/groups: 7


Applicant

A Information on the applicant
  • name: Projektgruppe "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum"

more information in the application form only


B Profile of the applicant

Status:

  • private (PR)

Type:

  • Informal group of young people (NFP-IGYP)

Activity level:

  • European (E)

Objectives and activities of the promoter: Our group has been formed to promote this project on atomic threats around the Baltic Sea. We want to investigate and educate on the risks of nuclear power, connect to anti-nuclear groups in the region, and to raise the public awareness on the impacts of this technology on human beings and environment. As an informal group we can use the infrastructure of the project house in Mannsdorf, a part of the city of Döbeln. We are in touch with activists from other countries, particularly in the Baltic Sea region.

Our group will take part in the investigations, and help to coordinate the project. We will take over responsibility for the bookkeeping of the project and for this application. We will take over the practical local preparation work for project gatherings, and we will care about the shipment of information material produced within the project.


Did your organization/group received EU grants formerly already?

  • no


Partner promoter(s)

information in the application form only


Participants in the project

information in the application form only

  • number of Austrian participants: 4
  • number of Finnish participants: 5
  • number of Latvian participants: 4
  • number of Lithuanian participants: 6
  • number of Netherlands participants: 4
  • number of Polish participants: 4
  • number of German participants: 8
  • total number: 35


Project description

Objectives and priorities

Please explain the context, the origin and the objectives of your project and in which way it meets the objectives and the priorities of the Youth in Action Programme.

Nuclear power is dangerous for people and environment in many ways: it starts with uranium mining and its further treatment, goes on with the risks during the operation of the power plants – as proofed by Chernobyl, Fukushima and Harrisburg (Three Mile Island) – and eventually there is this big problem left over: no safe solution for a final disposal of nuclear waste anywhere on earth.

Hundreds of thousands of people died in consequence of the catastrophes in Chernobyl (Soviet Union; these days: Ukraine) and Fukushima (Japan); millions of victims are expected to suffer the long-term impacts of the radiation released by these atomic facilities. Serious accidents took place in many other sites every few years, too: Windscale (1957 - United Kingdom), Mayak/Kyshtym (1959 - Soviet Union; these days: Russia), Tokaimura (1999 – Japan) are examples for nuclear accidents killing people directly. Other accidents like Brunsbüttel 2001 in Germany were close to a meltdown.

Since decades scientists warn the health impacts of radiation to be under-estimated enormously. The so-called "low" level radiation released by atomic facilities and within transports of radioactive material has the potential to damage cells and genes causing diseases, genetic damages and deaths. During the last ten years a number of studies has showed significant evidence for regular operated atomic power stations causing cancer. The "strongest" study is still the so-call "KiKK study" including the biggest data collection showing a seriously increased risks for children living close to German nuclear power plants to experience cancer.

Within the operation of uranium mines huge amounts of uranium ore are dug and stored on surface releasing radioactive materials like radon and spreading radioactivity to the surrounding water systems and environment in general. Uranium mining exposes the mostly indigenous workers to serious health risks. Thousands of cases have been officially registered already. Besides this dangerous release of radiation, the uranium mines produce huge amounts of "tailings" - radioactive and toxic waste waters stored forever in so-called tailing ponds mostly unprotected in nature.

The fuel used in atomic reactors includes a major share of the uranium-238 isotope with a half-life of some 4.5 billion years. It takes some 45 billion years before most of the isotope will be decayed. During the decay, other isotopes and elements are created with different amounts and types of radiations releasing as well with different half-life. As any amount of radiation is capable of causing health impacts, radiation exposure is to be reduced and avoided as much as possible. Thus, a safe final disposal of the radioactive waste is necessary for millions and billions of years. In the light of significant and unpredictable changes in society, knowledge of people and nature, such a safe disposal is impossible.

Some of us were involved to the "Stop Nuclear Power - Baltic Sea Info Tour 2010", and got to know about the special situation of this sea. Due to the low water exchange with the Atlantic Ocean, the majority of radioactive particles once captured in the Baltic Sea accumulate there. Thus, the fallout of nuclear weapon tests, Chernobyl accident, and Sellafield emissions concentrated in it and made it - according to the data of the scientists of the countries of the Baltic Sea region gathered in the "Helsinki Commission" (HELCOM) - the most radioactive inland water body in the world. Data also shows the radioactive impact of nuclear facilities of former Eastern European countries and Northern ones. Following this information it seems that even the biggist radioactive pollution is released by the Studsvik atomic facility in Sweden.

Getting in touch with activists in the Baltic Sea countries, learning about the facilities in their regions and understanding that the public is hardly informed at all about the specific pollution of the sea and the threats it is additionally faced to by the proposed uranium mining projects and by transports of atomic fuel and nuclear waste, we got inspired and motivated to focus on this topic more. Some of us connected with each other, experts and further organizations in this region to get prepared to start this project. We understood that there is a basic lack of information within the anti-nuclear scene as well as in the general public. When we started to create an overview for ourselves, we figured out that there are more than 60 atomic facilities in the water shed of the Baltic Sea - partly in operation, some are already decommissioned (but potentially polluted the sea in the past and still pose the risk of having left contaminated ground), and a number of them is still in the stage of being planned or constructed.

Our project aimes on educating people and public in general on the radioactive pollution of the Baltic Sea, particularly by informing about the specific atomic facilities and their threats. We also want to support dedicated activists educating and campaigning against certain plants in their region by connecting them with each other and by providing the contact to them with our publication work. Thus, we want to strengthen the civil networks of citizens, and to support particularly young people to understand their rights as European citizens, to teach them as well methods of implementation of their rights and of reaching other citizens (or to put pressure on decision makers in institutions and companies) as knowledge on atomic power.

We also want to learn ourselves more about nuclear power, the policies in the European Union and in the member states, get to know experts and activists in the nuclear field and develop our skills regarding public relations, media and investigative journalism. Thus, we want to investigate facts and background information on each atomic facility in the Baltic Sea region as well as activities of organizations criticizing them. This information will be preprocessed for raising the public awareness on the risks of nuclear power, and will be provided in raw and unmodified form on our website, too. Tools for putting our goals into effect will be this website acting as a database on all atomic facilities, flyers we will produce, a book formed as an encyclopedia and a series of information events.

As atomic policies in Europe are much influenced by transnational treaties and co-operations, it is also important to understand these mechanisms, and to show other young people the importance to act together on a transnational level, too. We want to show how the European citizenship provides tools to make a change in the European, but also national, energy policies. Young people need to become aware of the European dimension of nuclear power, and the interconnections of impacts of this technology in the Baltic Sea region as well as the international treaties in effect in this area are a good example for this interdependency.

With our project, we also want to involve disadvantaged young people in an emancipated way. Many of our friends who don't share the same educational or cultural backgrounds, or who have been experienced different social or economic conditions, are often excluded from interesting projects and activities that would also increase their skills and opportunities in life. We want to be aware of differences and disadvantages, and try to make it possible for everyone involved to our project to equally take part in decision making and designing the image of the project. We also don't want to remain in the circles of more experienced and privileged Central / Northern European activists, but get to know the thinking and ways of organizing themselves of our partner groups in former Eastern European countries. This project serves us with a great chance to emancipated co-operate with each other as they can provide special skills (languages, experiences, understanding) helpful to investigate on the facilities and policies in the Eastern Baltic Sea region.

As we will gather much interesting and relevant information that needs to be provided in a suitable form to the general public, our creativity and entrepreneurship will be challenged. We will explore useful means of communication, promotion and reaching people, develop materials and methods to draw attention on our cause, and provide people with well-preprocessed material.


Partnership and activities/Project's design

Please indicate:

  • how you found the other promoter(s), how you established an efficient partnership, and how the partner(s) will cooperate and

be involved in the project

  • the activities foreseen throughout the project for its implementation, including preparatory and evaluation activities
  • the practical arrangements for the implementation of the Activity (food, lodging, transports, etc.)

When sending this form in paper to your Agency, please attach an estimated overview of the planned activity.

Several participants in this project have been active in different constellations with each others and with the topic in the past already. Thus, many connections to partner groups have been established already during the last years. Luonto-Liitto for instance was the first international partner group for some of the German activists, when they were in 2007 involved to a project of the Greenkids e.V. organization visiting the Finnish nuclear reactor Olkiluoto. Over the last years there were single contacts of members of the applicant's group with members of Luonto-Liitto in projects, but the formal co-operation with the organization will be renewed with this project.

In 2008, activists from Austria ("Sonne + Freiheit") and Germany met in an international anti-nuclear network gathering organized by a French group with support of the YOUTH programme. Since that time, we met in international events and arranged mutual projects.

Several of the promoters of this project met each other in the last year's International Anti-nuclear Gathering organized by another German group. There, activists from ZALI.LT, Sonne + Freiheit and WISE were involved. The contacts to the Polish group had been established in the process of preparing the 2010 Baltic Sea Info Tour, while the contact to the Latvian activists has its origin in the Nuclear Climate Camp organized by another Finnish group with YOUTH support in Lapland in 2009.

WISE and Sonne + Freiheit are internationally campaigning groups with many networking contacts and experienced people, who several people of us met and co-operated with since several years. The German "Atomgefahren im Ostseeraum" group has been formed just lately, but many of the activists gathered here were active with other German anti-nuclear groups before, and as those involved to most of the network connections described before, too.

Roughly, the project will be separated into a preparation phase, two sections of activity phase (investigations and reach out), and an evaluation/valorization phase.

The preparation phase starts on August 3rd and will be on the one hand used to clarify and design the project more detailed and concrete, and on the other hand to share responsibilities and tasks with each other. It includes the Advance Planning Visit taking place in the middle of September, and will roughly end at the end of the same month.

From October 2013 to summer 2014 we will basically focus on investigations to discover the atomic policies, political backgrounds, critics' organizations and protests as well as the specific atomic facilities in all regions of the water shed of the Baltic Sea. These investigations will include work with "paper archives" (libraries, archives, collections of NGOs, etc.), internet search (Wikipedia; operators', authorities' and critics' websites, general search in engines), interviews with activists and representatives of concerned institutions, excursions to selected plants, and group work in international project meetings we will hold.

As soon as basic materials have been preprocessed for further public relations, we will publish first articles in magazines like the German environmental grassroots magazine "grünes blatt", the German "anti atom aktuell" magazine, or the international "Nuclear Monitor" as well as in newsletters as the Nuclear Heritage Network's "NukeNews" or the Austrian "OekoNews". These articles will also be featured on our website and offered to groups and organizers within our anti-nuclear networks for other publications (like country status reports). This second part of the activity phase will overlap with the first part (investigations) for practical reasons.

We will prepare specific flyers connected to topics we are investigating on: on the radioactive pollution of the Baltic Sea, uranium mining developments in Scandinavia, specific atomic plants, etc. Step by step we will also prepare a presentation to be used in information events starting probably from summer 2014. Eventually, in autumn 2014, we want to produce a publication in the manner of a reference book providing one page about each of more than 60 nuclear facilities in the Baltic Sea region, an article on the atomic policy of each country of the area, and including background articles on radioactive pollution of the Baltic Sea, Chernobyl disaster impacts and uranium mining in the region. An appendix will collect all uranium exploration sites that were made public so far - these are anticipated several hundreds of locations, too much to be provided with an article for each.

In November 2014 our evaluation and valorization phase will start. Then we will gather feedback and reflection on the group process, on the project in general and on follow-up ideas. We will gather feedback and publish it on our website. To implement some of the follow-up project ideas, we will reserve some time and capacities for reflecting on them and getting started a preparation process for some selected ones. Visble and lasting results of our projects will be the website (database of atomic sites, articles and documentation), the flyers we will have produced, the book, and the presentation that we will provide for download online, too. For sure, some activists of our group will be willing after the project end to continue holding the presentation in information events to keep on educating the public on our findings.

Practical arrangements for the project concern basically the preparation of the Advance Planning Visit and further project meetings including food, accommodation and infrastructure arrangements. This will be provided by the applicant, or for some project meetings that possibly would take place in other promoters' countries by these promoters, because it is more practical to be done by local people.

Arrangements connected to the production of materials (flyers, presentation, book), or to the arrangement of information events will be done by activists throughout the whole co-operation. We will separate tasks and share responsibilities beginning with the prepation phase, and probably update these agreements later whenever necessary.


REMARKS: Regarding the project costs listed in the budget section, we want to remark that it could look weird that we apply for a higher total amount of project costs than covered by the lump sum - this is due to the fact that our project costs are higher than the available lump sum. However, we cover this difference with an additional grant by the Greenkids e.V. association which are engaged in the Nuclear Heritage Network, too. The share mentioned in the budget section that we will provide from our own resources concerns only the 30% of travel costs not covered by the grant. This will vary depending on the real travel costs. Basically it means that our group covers these 30% of travel costs (except for the Advance Planning Visit) from our own resources.


Protection and safety

Please describe how your project ensures the protection and safety of the young people involved.

This project mainly consists of gathering of information on the internet and in archives, which does not require specific safety measures. However, we will need pictures of nuclear facilities, and sometimes excursions will be useful to figure out more, or to better understand the context. The young participants in some cases will have to visit sites, and there could be safety measures necessary to protect health or security measures to avoid later legal difficulties (e.g. copyright, right of photography). For this purpose, a basic instruction about rights, duties and personal protection measures will be developed for each special excursion or issue.

We will take care about each other and be respectful. At the beginning of the project burnout risks will be discussed, giving the participants advice how not to overload themselves with work and how to avoid a burnout. We will also hold a workshop on this topic in one of the project meetings after the advanced planning visit with printed materials and self-assessment tests.


Advance Planning Visit

Have you planned an Advance Planning Visit? - Yes

If so, please indicate proposed programme, dates and venue.

The advanced planning meeting is supposed to help to detailed design and structure our project. It will probably take place in the Mannsdorf project house from September 21 to September 22, 2013. Participants will arrive on September 20 and leave on September 23. Due to practical scheduling challenges, we will consult all active participants of our project in the beginning of August to clarify if dates and venue suite all of those who will join the meeting. Maybe we will have to change dates or venue then. Thus, this should be considered just a preliminary schedule.

September 21

09.00-10.00 breakfast
10.00-10.30 opening of the meeting: ice-breaking, introduction to each other and with the project
10.30-12.00 creation of the Nuclear Baltic Map: a list of all nuclear facilities in the region; overview on investigation requirements
12.00-12.30 coffee break
12.30-14.00 creation of the Nuclear Baltic Map: sharing responsibilities for investigations and writing about specific facilities
14.00-15.00 lunch
15.00-17.00 clarification of the project objectives, activities, exploitation of the results and timetable in detail
17.00-17.30 coffee break
17.30-19.00 clarification of the project objectives, activities, exploitation of the results and timetable (continuation)
19.00-20.00 dinner
21.00-23.00 open evening for discussions, planning, socializing

September 22

09.00-10.00 breakfast
10.00-12.00 reach-out materials and strategy: planned items & sharing responsibilities
12.00-12.30 coffee break
12.30-14.00 visibility of the project: public relations, communication to anti-nuclear networks, promotion - sharing responsibilities
14.00-15.00 lunch
15.00-17.00 communication during the project: e-mail listserve, Skype, meetings, internet wiki page
17.00-17.30 coffee break
17.30-19.00 resume, clarification of unclear issues, closing of the meeting
19.00-20.00 dinner, farewell vegan BBQ


Project's content and methodology

Please describe:

  • how the main theme reflects the interests and needs of participants
  • the working methods
  • how the planned activities and working methods will contribute to the process of non-formal learning and to the promotion of

social and personal development of young people involved in the project

  • how the young people will be actively involved in each stage of the project
  • how your project promotes innovative elements or approaches and how it supports creativity and entrepreneurship

Energy and environment are two major topics in both European and local level. The European Union wants to see renewable energy account for 20 % of final energy consumption by 2020, which suggests that the use, importance and role of nuclear power (currently 28 % of total energy consumption in the EU) will be reduced.

Nuclear power is also a hot topic in many European countries, including those in the Baltic Sea region. Poland is planning to build a new NPP, Belarus is building the Ostrovets NPP, Latvia and Estonia have discussed participation in the Lithuanian Visaginas NPP project. Finland is willing to build a new reactor in Olkiluoto NPP, while the previous one has not been completed yet, and is willing to build a new NPP in Pyhäjoki, close to Hanhikivi cape, which is about 500 hectares wide and full of natural treasures. Sweden has Forsmark, Ringhals and Oskarshamn NPPs, which often get into newspapers because of safety problems. The last time it happened was in October 2012 when Greenpeace activists broke in to Forsmark and Ringhals NPPs in order to draw attention to the lack of security at the plants.

Nuclear power and its threats to health, economy and the environment is one of the public concerns of young people. Thus, our topics meet the interests and needs of our participants. As we have developed this project concept ourselves, and implemented our specific needs, for instance regarding the group process, it of course also reflects our needs and interests.

Working methods are individual investigations, group reflections on this, writing and proofreading each others texts, group discussions, trainings to share skills and learn more. We will have excursions, some of us will visit archives and investigate there, there will be interviews with workers, critics, and politicians. We will prepare, layout and publish flyers and a book. The text we produce, we will also translate in as many languages as possible, and provide it online, and as far as financially possible also in printed form.

Our project process will include an Advance Planning Visit, several project meetings, communication in a mailing list, Skype conferences, phone talks and indirect communication through a wiki website which will be a desktop for us to collect information, prepare text and to start the publishing process. Later we will also have meetings with environmental pressure groups, information events and lectures to spread the word (as well in specific events as also as part of camps and congresses). We will promote the publications we produced, and we will do public relations.

Thus, we all will learn specific details on nuclear power as well as methods of investigation, media work and public relations. Our team working skills, group process experiences and self-confidence will be developed. This is also helpful for our future development and for the implementation of future projects. We will extend our contacts and networks, and strengthen our own awareness of environmental challenges and opportunities to make a change.

This project will include a lot of independent work, which means that participants will need to make their time schedules and stick to them, and require communication and analytical skills. At the beginning of the project all participants will receive a list of all nuclear facilities in the Baltic Sea region and chose the ones to do research about. Also they will receive clear guidelines about what needs to be included in each article and advice how and where to collect information. Participants will communicate with each other in every stage of the project using Skype conferences. It is also possible to have Skype conferences "on demand".

We will involve less experienced, but motivated young people to join, introducing them to the project and sharing with them skills and knowledge. More experienced people will "supervise" in certain fields, making sure that participants have understood their tasks and will be ready to help with an advice if necessary. In other fields other participants with specific skills will supervise on their field.

All decisions will be made together in an emancipated way. We will care for others which are disadvantaged due to a lack of knowledge or experiences, or due to different social or cultural background. We will also encourage all participants to share tasks and responsibilities with each other to avoid the appearance of dominance of a few main organizers.

We will figure out and develope creative means and methods to spread the word on our cause.

The learning dimension (i.e. acquisition/improvement of competences) is an essential component of any project supported by the Youth in Action programme. The programme puts in place a process of recognition of competences gained through participation to Youth in Action projects which is called Youthpass (please visit www.youthpass.eu). With this regard, please describe:

  • competences (i.e. knowledge, skills and attitudes) which might be acquired by the participants in your project
  • planned measures aimed at providing a place for reflection and assessment of the learning experience in your project

This project will develop and foster communication and analytical skills. Other competence supported within the project time are concentration skills and language knowledge (English, other languages). All these competences can be useful in future projects for they are essential for analytical journalism/research doing.

There will be a place for reflection and assessment of the project experience in our Skype conferences and project meetings. At the end of the project we will hold specific meetings and Skype conferences as well as email questionnaires for reflection and feedback.

All young participants will be invited to receive a Youth Path to illustrate the skills they developed with this project.


Intercultural dimension

Please indicate if and how your project reflects the following characteristics:

  • the project increases young people's positive awareness of other cultures,
  • the project supports dialogue and intercultural encounters with other young people from different backgrounds and cultures,
  • the project helps to prevent and combat prejudice, racism and all attitudes leading to exclusion,
  • the project develops a sense of tolerance and understanding of diversity.

Since the project will gather people from three different regions - Western, Eastern and Northern - of Europe, it will support intercultural dialogue. We all have different social, cultural, and partly also political backgrounds, but a common cause. Thus, we have a motivation to deal with each others and to develop a positive awareness of these differences.

The project methods and activities will actively support this intercultural exchange with formal methods, and informally in talks and every day's life activities in meetings (like cooking together or arranging other things).


European dimension

Please indicate if and how your project reflects the following characteristics; tick box(es) and then describe:

  • The project fosters young people's sense of European citizenship and helps them to understand their role as part of the

present and future of Europe (YiA-Prio-81)

  • The project reflects a common concern for European society, such as racism, xenophobia and anti-semitism, drug abuse...

(YiA-Prio-82)

  • The project's theme is linked to EU topics, such as EU enlargement, the roles and activities of the European institutions,

the EU's action in matters affecting young people (YiA-Prio-83)

  • The project debates the founding principles of the EU, i.e. principles of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights and

fundamental freedoms, and the rule of law (YiA-Prio-84)

Today and tomorrow of the European Union will depend on youth. Today, using active participation and speaking about their concerns, they can already influence things and realize their potential and power. In future as new adults they can continue things started in their teenage years and it is very likely that people who have been politically and socially active during their youth will remain active later.

This project is a chance to make the first youth created encyclopedia about all nuclear facilities around the Baltic Sea, a tool that will give the reader both a brief overview and a material for reference, and could be used for years. It is, in some respect, a unique project and a great chance for carrying out a serious research.


Impact, multiplying effect and follow-up

Please explain the expected impact on young participants and the local communities involved in the project and what measures are foreseen to attain this impact. Furthermore, please describe the planned measures aimed at recognizing and validating the learning outcomes of participants and promoters involved in the project. In a long term perspective, please describe how you plan to achieve a multiplier effect and sustainable impact. Please also explain how you plan to follow up this project (e.g. new projects within the framework of the Youth in Action Programme, continuous contact with the promoter(s), etc.)?

The participants will have taken part in a large scale project, whose results will be widely distributed and which will not lose its importance and topicality for many years. Also they will have improved their research and journalism skills. During this project, participants will collect large amount of information, far more then they will actually need for the project purposes. This information, that will also contain useful data, can be used for other projects, researches, articles, presentations or simply be shared among anti-nuclear activists.

The follow-up of this project will most likely be continuous contact with the promoters and a new project. This time it could be a project that involves seminars and discussions with the public on such topics as atomic policy, threats to health, environment and economics caused by nuclear power, renewable energy. At the moment it is difficult to say which countries could be involved in such a project.

Already now we have some more concrete follow-up projects in mind to result from the "Atomic Threats In The Baltic Sea Region" project: an exhibition on atomic facilities and protests in the Baltic Sea area, and a new info tour around the sea similar to the 2010 one which inspired our project of today (but shorter and more focused). Further project ideas will appear during the time until the end of 2014, after producing our first materials based on investigations we made. We will utilize the project meetings we will organize to consider on follow-up projects, too.


Visibility

Apart from the compulsory use of the Programme Logo (cfr. Part C, Publicity, of the Programme Guide), please describe:

  • how you will ensure the visibility of the project
  • how your project will provide clear promotional added value for the Youth in Action Programme.

The visibility of the project will be ensured in several ways: press releases will be written and sent to media in all partner countries. The first press release will be made shortly before the project will start. We plan to make several press releases during the project informing about state of affairs and project activities, such as information events. The last press release will be made shortly after the end of the project, informing about the project results.

Information about the project and project updates will also be sent to NukeNews and grünes blatt. NukeNews is a multilingual (English, German, Czech, Finnish, French, Russian, Lithuanian) system of newsletters that informs about atomic policies and developments, anti-nuclear campaigns and actions. grünes blatt is ...

Also information about the project will be distributed among anti-nuclear groups in different countries (all partner countries, other) via e-mail. During the project, when we will have collected and processed information, several information events will be organized in all partner countries. These events could be organized in two ways: as interactive open air events with an info tent and some creative activities (performances, short plays, games, etc.) or as formal events with presentations and discussions. The latter ones could take place, for instance, in ministries of environment, European Union information centers or in informal youth gathering places.

A project flyer will also be made. It will be available both in electronic and printed versions. PDF flyer will be available for dowload on the Nuclear Heritage Network, while printed version will be sent to all project partners for distribution in their countries. The flyer will be prepared before the first information events so it could be distributed there. The printed version will be available "on demand" for other organizations in the partner countries/organizations from other countries, too. Completed researches and links to additional materials (reports, official statements, articles in press, videos, etc.) will be published on the Nuclear Heritage Network, http://www.nuclear-heritage.net, which connects anti-nuclear activists worldwide, provide information regarding nuclear issues and anti-nuclear activities in many countries.

In the final stage of the project the book "Atomic Threats Around the Baltic Sea" will be published. The book will be printed in size A5 and consist of two parts. The first part will include background articles on radioactive pollution of the Baltic Sea and impacts of the Chernobyl Disaster. The second part of the book will be dedicated to countries around the Baltic Sea (including Belarus as it is a part of the sea's water shed) and will be divided into chapters (one chapter for a country). Chapters will consist of an introduction to national atomic policy and current state of affairs. Each article on an atomic facility will include a photo of it or of the area, an introduction to the plant, technical details, contact information of active anti-nuclear groups and links to websites of critics and operators. At the end an appendix will show the names of proposed sites for uranium exploration and mining.

The promotial value for the Youth in Action Programme will be ensured by the large amount of people this project will address and its many activities. By seeing the Programme logo on the materials, which we will produce, for instance, flyers, the book people can be inspired to make their own Youth in Action project.


Dissemination and exploitation of results

Please give a detailed description of standard measures planned with a view to disseminating and exploiting the results of the project.
(For inspiration, please see Part B - How to develop a good project? of the Programme Guide)

Exploitation of the results will be done by documenting our work on the Nuclear Heritage Network, http://www.nuclear-heritage.net, preparing and distributing the flyer and the book, organizing information events and sending informative e-mails to anti-nuclear networks. All of these activities will spread the word on our topics and the results.

Dissemination will be done by reflection and feedback meetings during our face-to-face meetings and by e-mail and Skype at the end of the project.


Inclusion of young people with fewer opportunities

Does your project involve young people with fewer opportunities (facing situations that make their inclusion in society more difficult, see main situations/obstacles identified below) and/or special needs (mobility problems, health care, etc.)? If so, please describe and motivate.

Within the applicant's group several young people are involved suffering social and/or economic obstacles, and/or are faced to health and educational differences. One person lives in a socially difficult "ghetto" due to economic problems, one person had problems with drugs in the past and is faced to deal with the consequences, another one had to experience jail and the social impacts this has on their live now. One person cancelled their school education, several others selected alternative educational opportunities due to problems with the normal school. Due to economic disadvantages, some people receive social welfare support. Two of our group members have a gluten intolerance, and being vegans at the same time they need a special costly diet. Four group members live in structurally weak areas making it difficult for them to be mobile.

We respond to these disadvantages by supporting indigent group members solidarily with their travel and communication expenses to be able to equally join the project. We also share technical equipment with them/provide technical devices for them from the project. The specific social experiences and differences we meet with a cautious and steady group process giving space to those of us who don't have the same educational or experience background to make everything understandable and joinable for everyone. We will take the time it needs to reflect and discuss the specific experiences people were faced to. To include the persons with health problems, we will provide the specific food they need, although it is a bit more expensive.

Our Eastern project participants are historically faced to specific geographic and cultural differences, particularly the young people from Lithuania and Latvia. The Soviet history has impacted their society regarding economic and social conditions and expectations. We have experiences, particularly in every day's project life with each other, that challenges can appear connected to the social and cultural differences. We will take this knowledge into account, and the coach will help us in this respect with their experience, too.

As the form didn't accept the total amount of disadvantaged participants, and only accepted those of the applicant, the figure provided there (4) concerns the applicant only. All together it concerns 14 people.


Number of young people with fewer opportunities involved in the project 4


Please indicate the situation(s) they face:

  • Social obstacles (YiA-Prio-41)
  • Health problems (YiA-Prio-46)
  • Economic obstacles (YiA-Prio-42)
  • Cultural differences (YiA-Prio-45)
  • Educational difficulties (YiA-Prio-44)
  • Geographical obstacles (YiA-Prio-47)


Details of the Coach

If you have a coach accompanying and supporting you with your activities, please provide contact details.

information in the application form only


Budget

information in the application form only


Bank details

information in the application form only


Signature of the legal representative

information in the application form only


Declaration on honour

information in the application form only