Women, employment vs poverty (2008-2009)
With the support of the UNDP office in Serbia, the Foundation implemented this project from 2008 to 2009 with the goal of increasing the capacity for employing women within the local communities. The focus of the activies surrounding this project was on strengthening collaboration between key players in planning, policy-making and implementation of the programme to improve womens’ competitiveness in the labour market. In cooperation with local civil society oranisations, cooperation was established with representatives of the business sector. Activies surrounding this project were implemented in Niš, Pirot, Kraljevo, Velika Plana and Paraćin.
EVENTS
HIGHLIGHTS
2025-11-19 | Belgrade, Sarajevo, Tirana, Skopje, Pristina
REGIONAL CONFERENCE Western Balkan Youth and the European Union: Shaping Our Common Future
CURRENT PROJECTS
PUBLICATIONS
NCEU Book of Recommendations 2025
Challenges for Organising and Collective Bargaining in Care, Administration and Waste collection sectors in Central Eastern European Countries
Public Policy Proposals – Collective Bargaining (CEECAW)
CDF in Cities and Municipalities: Together for a Better Life in Local Communities
Comparative reports on collective bargaining - CEECAW
POLITEIA – Regional School for Youth Participation 2025 (leaflet)
Report on the State of Labour Rights in the Republic of Serbia in 2024
Unlocking Collective Bargaining Power in Three Sectors: A Call to Action
Main Issues of Labor Legislation in Serbia
New Monitoring Report by the “SDGs for All” Platform: Is the End Goal in Sight?
NCEU Book of Recommendations 2024 (Summary)
National reports on collective bargaining in Serbia - CEECAW
The Comparative Analysis of Youth Policies in the Western Balkans (WB)
Unlocking Collective Bargaining Power in Three Sectors: A Call to Action
Western Balkans Youth in Policy Making Processes
SDGs for All Platform newsletter (December 2023)
Analysis: Poverty Reduction Through Sustainable Agriculture in Serbia (with Summary)
Serbia 2030 - Many challenges, little time: Is Serbia set on its development path?

















































