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Striding on a Winding Road: Young People’s Transitions from Education to Work in Bulgaria

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Abstract

The transition from education to work in the global economy is no longer a straightforward one-time move for young people. In Bulgaria, this change started with the transition from a centrally planned economy to a market economy in the 1990s and was accompanied by the arrival of high rates of early school leaving, youth unemployment, and a growing group of disengaged youths (NEETs). The European initiatives in support of youth labour market integration are translated locally, with a narrow focus on “employability” while neglecting the many educational, training, and social needs of young people. The analysis in this paper is informed by the theoretical framework of life course research. It starts with an elaboration of the recontextualisation of EU policies such as the Youth Guarantee in the local realities of socioeconomic structures using Eurostat and national data. Second, we present 4 case studies (selected out of a total of 42 in-depth interviews) of young adults aged 18–30 in order to highlight the ways in which young people’s individual agency filters and influences the institutional policies and practices regulating youth social integration. Our qualitative analysis reveals the multiplicity and diversity of youth journeys into work through the institutions and social structures and the inadequacy of the applied policy measures.
Citation: Kovacheva, S.; Hristozova,
D. Striding on a Winding Road:
Young People’s Transitions from
Education to Work in Bulgaria.
Societies 2022,12, 97. https://
doi.org/10.3390/soc12040097
Academic Editor: Gregor Wolbring
Received: 21 April 2022
Accepted: 20 June 2022
Published: 23 June 2022
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societies
Article
Striding on a Winding Road: Young People’s Transitions from
Education to Work in Bulgaria
Siyka Kovacheva * and Darena Hristozova
Department of Applied and Institutional Sociology, University of Plovdiv, 4000 Plovdiv, Bulgaria;
darenahristozova@gmail.com
*Correspondence: siykakovacheva@gmail.com
Abstract:
The transition from education to work in the global economy is no longer a straightforward
one-time move for young people. In Bulgaria, this change started with the transition from a centrally
planned economy to a market economy in the 1990s and was accompanied by the arrival of high rates
of early school leaving, youth unemployment, and a growing group of disengaged youths (NEETs).
The European initiatives in support of youth labour market integration are translated locally, with a
narrow focus on “employability” while neglecting the many educational, training, and social needs
of young people. The analysis in this paper is informed by the theoretical framework of life course
research. It starts with an elaboration of the recontextualisation of EU policies such as the Youth
Guarantee in the local realities of socioeconomic structures using Eurostat and national data. Second,
we present 4 case studies (selected out of a total of 42 in-depth interviews) of young adults aged
18–30 in order to highlight the ways in which young people’s individual agency filters and influences
the institutional policies and practices regulating youth social integration. Our qualitative analysis
reveals the multiplicity and diversity of youth journeys into work through the institutions and social
structures and the inadequacy of the applied policy measures.
Keywords:
youth transitions; opportunity structures; agency; life course; life trajectories; youth
policies
1. Introduction
Globalisation, in the face of the increasing international interconnectedness of markets,
intensifying competition, and the massive diffusion of global networks and knowledge
through new information and communication technologies, together with the rising depen-
dence on “random shocks”, creates the conditions for both economic innovations and social
change and a rise in the sense of instability. The increase in its pervasiveness impacts directly
on the most vulnerable social groups through locally entrenched systems of employment,
education, social regimes, and family patterns [
1
]. On the basis of the forms of employment
in place, the educational opportunities, the social policies promoted, and the patterns of
family formation, young people in the transition stage to adulthood make their conscious
choices specific to their educational, employment, family, and reproductive careers.
The growing difficulties in young people’s entry into the labour market in Europe
since the last decades of the 20th century have made youth transitions a major target of
both youth research and youth policy in the EU. The new global challenges arising with the
COVID-19 pandemic and the mounting concerns about the war in Ukraine in 2022 make
the path from education to work even more insecure, prolonged, and fragmented. This
trend is exacerbated in the context of Bulgaria, which ranks among the last EU member
states in their economic output but among the first in income inequality. The pandemic in
the past two years brought not only a substantial deterioration of public health but also
high political instability, with the country changing two caretaker governments before
electing an unsteady four-party coalition. The restrictive measures taken by the changing
Societies 2022,12, 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12040097 https://www.mdpi.com/journal/societies
Societies 2022,12, 97 2 of 19
governments posed new barriers to young people in their access to quality education,
lifelong learning, and the labour market, with the latter additionally tightened by the wave
of returning migrants from abroad seeking secure employment in a very uncertain present.
Youth studies in Bulgaria tend to place their attention on young people’s values and
forms of behaviour in various life domains separately [
2
,
3
] rather than focusing on youth
transitions between them. The shift in value orientations towards education, work, politics,
and family among the cohorts of grandparents, parents, and young people is perceived
to reflect the wider social change in society [
4
]. However, though less noticed, changes
in the forms, length, and sequence of the school-to-work and housing transitions are also
indicative of significant social trends. Thus, the replacement of the strictly controlled and
linear youth transitions in the 1970s and 1980s of the 20th century with the de-standardised,
prolonged, and precarious trajectories in the 1990s is revealing of the radical societal trans-
formation of Bulgarian society towards a market economy and political democracy [
5
].
Interwoven with the changes in youth educational and employment choices is the transfor-
mation of their attitudes towards marriage and parenthood. There is a growing discrepancy
between marriage and childrearing, with a rise in co-habitation. The preferred age for
having a child is gradually increasing, and today, this step is taken more in the late 20s to
mid-30s of the course of life [6].
This paper makes an attempt to explain the growing complexity of school-to-work
transitions through a life course perspective. The approach takes into account the cu-
mulative nature of the different transitions in individual trajectories and place them in
the historical and cultural context in which they are embedded [
7
]. In the analysis that
follows, we first delineate the characteristics of the social context for young people’s lives in
Bulgaria 30 years after the system change and 2 years after the spread of COVID-19 in the
world. Building upon official statistical data and an overview of research reports and policy
evaluations, we focus on the gaps and contradictions in the institutional arrangements for
supporting the transition from school to work. We then proceed with qualitative analysis of
in-depth interviews with 42 young people who were experiencing various hurdles in their
access to the labour market. The findings draw a picture of diverse youth transitions, with
a noticeable polarization between those leaving the education system without completing
the primary level and university graduates. We present in more detail four cases of youth
trajectories demonstrating the polarised dilemmas that the current young generations face
when striding on the road between the levels of the educational system, lifelong learning
programs, and into the world of work. This paper contributes to the existing studies of
youth transitions by revealing the internal dynamic of the school-to-work transition instead
of only comparing its starting and ending points and highlighting the ways in which young
people’s individual agency works to overcome the gaps in the institutional policies and
practices regulating youth social integration.
2. Life Course Perspective of Youth Transitions
Youth transitions have been studied in a broad spectrum of theoretical frameworks
[810]
.
The life course perspective situates youth transitions in a wider time frame and examines
the interplay between the opportunity structures in the social context and young people’s
subjective agency in the process [
11
,
12
]. According to Elder ([
13
], p. 5) the life course con-
sists of “age graded transitions through institutions and social structures, and is embedded
in relationships that constrain and support behaviour—both the individual life course and
a person’s developmental trajectory are interconnected with the lives and development of
others”. The individual life course should be explored in its relationship with the historical
time and the social milieu in which the individual life is lived [
7
,
14
]. The inquiry into the
dynamics of youth transitions makes it possible to highlight the interlined processes of
individual and social change during the period of youth.
Youth transitions are embedded in specific socioeconomic and cultural structures and
institutional arrangements on multiple levels—national, regional, and local—which govern
the opportunities and constraints of individual trajectories [
15
]. Several typologies of
Societies 2022,12, 97 3 of 19
youth transition regimes have been developed [
16
,
17
] which either exclude or are not fully
applicable to the situation in the post-communist countries in Eastern Europe. Common
trends for present-day youth policies in the countries in the region are the contraction of
state support in comparison with the communist past and the rise in the importance of
the market mechanisms in access to welfare, as well as the preservation of a centralised
and comprehensive public educational system with growth in private institutions and a
renewed reliance on the family [
18
,
19
]. However, there were significant differences in the
institutional structures during the communist regime, despite its one-party rule over a
centrally planned economy and highly centralised social protection, and these grew during
the countries’ different paths of post-1989 societal transitions, creating complex country-
specific amalgams of liberal, universal, conservative, and sub-protective elements [
20
]. It is
important to bear in mind Raffe’s [
21
] observation that the social context in each country is
unique, and it is highly relevant to treat each as a separate case. Following this advice, we
describe the Bulgarian youth policy system in greater detail in the next section of the paper.
A major methodological principle in the perspective—the principle of agency [
15
,
22
]—
emphasises that people do not passively follow status-based life transitions but make more
or less informed choices within the available structure of opportunities and constraints.
The macrostructures do not fully determine the shapes of life trajectories but allow the
individuals to contribute to the process, actively constructing their biographies [
8
,
23
].
Unlike the rational choice theories that account for the estimation of the expected gains
and losses in the current situation, the life course perspective explores the meanings the
young attach to their choices, which change over time, and the ways in which they develop
aspirations, mobilise resources, and reflect on the process. The choices that the young make
at a certain point in time have consequences for their life courses expanding or restricting
the opportunities in the next life stages. This approach allows a dynamic understanding of
youth transitions, situating the school-to-work transition within the whole life trajectory of
the individual. Agency is not constant; rather, it develops over time, and as Emyrbayer
and Mische ([
24
], p. 963) argue, “it can only be captured in its full complexity
. . .
, if it is
analytically situated within the flow of time” as informed by the past, oriented towards
the present and the future. This intertwining of the different time dimensions presents the
young as reflexive agents of their life transitions, although in different degrees and with
different competences for self-reflection.
The life course perspective also underlines the social networks of young people, con-
sisting most commonly of family, friends, and peers, through which the young receive
support and resources for their life transitions. Youth transitions from education to em-
ployment are shaped and negotiated by various other actors as well [
25
], such as teachers,
social and youth workers, and policy makers. They serve as mediators between the institu-
tional arrangements and young people’s needs, while young people’s agency modifies and
actively transforms their influence.
Building upon the methodological approach of the life course perspective, we first
draw the picture of the changes in the opportunity structures for education-to-employment
transitions in Bulgaria, then look into young people’s agency along their individual journeys
and the ways in which they reflect upon their past, present, and future opportunities, and
explain their choices.
3. The Social Context of Youth Transitions in Bulgaria
In this section, we present an overview of the trends and specific aspects of the educa-
tional and training system, labour market conditions and their institutional regulations,
changes in social inequalities, and welfare provisions in support of young people in Bul-
garia in the beginning of the third decade of the 21st century. These characteristics largely
form the opportunity structures for youth school-to-work transitions at the national level
while acknowledging that significant regional and local inequalities also contribute to the
diversity of youth transitions.
Societies 2022,12, 97 4 of 19
The radical societal transformation of Bulgarian society towards a market economy
and political democracy from a centrally planned economy and one-party regime that
started in 1989 was accompanied by the replacement of the strictly controlled and linear
youth transitions in the 1970s and 1980s of the 20th century, with destandardised, prolonged,
and precarious trajectories since the 1990s [
5
]. The youth policy in Bulgaria also underwent
a significant change [
26
,
27
]. In the first decades of the social transformation, with the advent
of mass unemployment and soaring inflation, young people were largely ignored, and it
was only when accession to the EU became a more concrete political task that the concept
of youth began to be used again with the ideological aim to ease the European integration
of the country [
28
]. At present, youth policy relies on two major documents: The National
Youth Strategy (2021–2030) [
29
] and the Law on Youth (2012) [
30
], which introduced the
concept of youth workers for the first time and which have undergone several changes up
to now. These documents, followed by yearly action plans, indicate a strong influence of EU
policies on its basic concepts and main principles. More often than not, the newly adopted
programs and measures come in response to European initiatives than to problems in
youth transitions identified in official statistical data or in youth research [
31
]. A significant
deficiency of the policies in support of young people is the lack of coordination among
the various sectors of this policy, with a continuing strong centralisation towards the
top [
27
]. Youth policy at the EU level regulates a wide range of life domains in young
people’s transitions to adulthood [
32
]. Several overviews of the sectoral policies targeting
youth in Bulgaria [
33
,
34
] find a trend in the Bulgarian institutional approach towards a
heavy reliance on employment policies at the expense of lifelong learning and welfare
services. In what follows, we cover the development in the three policy areas that define the
main characteristics of the structure of opportunities and constraints for youth transitions
in Bulgaria.
3.1. Trends in Education and Education Policy
The education system in the country is comprehensive, offering free education to all
pupils and setting the obligatory age at 16, which coincides with the legal age for the start of
employment. While this regulation implies equality of opportunities for all young people
based on the meritocratic principle, in the past three decades, there has been a definite trend
towards a greater student selection and segmentation between elite and mass institutions at
the level of secondary education. The PISA studies on student achievement [
35
] measured
a high degree of segregation along socioeconomic lines in Bulgaria, with students from
disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds doing worse at reading and mathematics. The
latest results place Bulgaria in one group with Albania, Argentina, Greece, and Israel as the
five countries with the most unequal distribution of mathematical literacy skills (ibid, 8). In
a national study of the formal educational system, Lavrentsova and Valkov [
36
] found a
growing trend towards educational segregation between and within schools based onethnic
origin. Various studies attest to numerous instances of overt and covert discrimination
towards Roma youth [37,38].
The education policy in the country after the regime change has been quick to adjust
and adopt policy documents in compliance with the EU’s requirements. However, the
share of education expenditure in Bulgaria’s state budget is below the EU average, being
at 3.8% of the GDP [
39
], and within the educational expenditures, the share of support
for private providers is rising, which further exacerbates the social inequalities among
children with unequal family resources. Although all schools, including vocational high
schools, allow the young to continue into post-secondary and higher education, this type
of education remains unpopular among young people and their parents. Students from
vocational establishments have a much higher non-completion rate than those from general
schools, where the quality of teaching is often low and the involvement of employers in
vocational education and training remains minimal despite the recent attempts to establish
dual-learning schools [
40
]. Official statistical data indicate that the rate of early school
leavers in the past 10 years fluctuates between 12.4% and 13.9%, and it was at 12.8% in
Societies 2022,12, 97 5 of 19
2020 [
41
]. The rate is not only significantly higher than the average for the EU (9.9%) but is
expected to rise even further as a result of the spread of COVID-19 and the slow uptake of
online teaching.
The country’s policy interventions did not reduce the rate of early school leaving
significantly while greatly promoting enrolment in higher education. Since the regime
change in 1989, there has been a gradual rise in the number of students in higher education
with the liberalisation of the entry requirements and the spread of private universities
and colleges. The state insitutions expanded their recruitment by creating a network of
branches in towns across the country. The number of students in tertiary education (among
the age group of 20–24) in 2019 was 36.4%, higher than the EU average of 33.4% [
41
].
University education in Bulgaria in general shares the flaws of the country’s vocational
schools, leaning towards a more theoretical orientation and lacking a focus on the skills
required by employers [42].
3.2. Labour Market Trends and Employment Policy
The societal transition in Bulgaria resulted not only in the lengthening of youth
transitions but also in their precariarisation. Commonly, they involve multiple steps, with
young people moving between unsatisfactory jobs and spells of unemployment, short
trainings, or going back into formal education as well as inactivity. The labour market is
tight and not favourable towards the young. The trend towards insecure youth employment
in Bulgaria mostly takes the form of young people accepting jobs below their qualifications.
This is a result largely of the shift in young people’s and their parents’ attitudes when
responding to employers’ practices. Thus, while in the first years after the regime change
the unemployment rate among university graduates was very high because the young and
their parents waited for the abundance of jobs expected “after the end of the Transition”,
at present, the young who grew up only in the years of a market economy tend to take
up any available jobs [31]. Work in the informal economy is still high, particularly among
newcomers in the labour market and those without vocational qualifications.
What is well above the EU level in Bulgaria is the share of NEETs, or young people
stuck in a “no man’s land” outside of both school and work. This is a highly illustrative
indicator of the problems in youth transitions, standing for a wide variety of reasons for
falling into this situation [
43
]. The NEET rate was highest in 2013, reaching a quarter of
all young people. It dropped to 20% in 2019 only to rise again in 2020 to 21.6% [
44
]. The
gender gap among this group is highly significant, with women overtaking men with one
third of the cases. Despite the debates concerning the statistical definition of this group, the
data signal for a rise in the share of this group among Bulgarian youth in the years of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The national policy for youth employment developed gradually after the regime
change in 1989. It came as a response to the collapse of the system of full employment
that existed in the countries of the former Soviet bloc up to the end of the 1980s in the
20th century [
5
], similar to the situation in most of the Western countries in the 1950s and
1960s [
17
]. In the eastern part of the continent, under the centrally planned economy, the
transitions from school to jobs were rather short and linear, eased by the system of state
allocation of graduates, and job changing was strongly stigmatised. With the orientation
towards a “free market” in the 1990s, youth unemployment became a permanent feature
of the economy and has since remained about two times higher than the general rate.
National statistical data draw a picture of a downward trend in both the general and youth
unemployment rates from 2010 to 2019 [
44
], when the youth unemployment was less than
7%, well below the EU average. The trend was reversed in 2020, hitting a rise of 2% that is
likely to continue in the near future, with the pandemic causing a significant imprint on
the country’s economy.
Youths became a significant target of the country’s employment policy with the
implementation of the EU initiative the Youth Guarantee, starting in 2014. Various schemes
and programs were designed to compensate for the shortage of jobs with the ongoing
Societies 2022,12, 97 6 of 19
deindustrialisation and globalisation. Specific features in the design of the Youth Guarantee
in Bulgaria are the wider age range of 15–29 (rather than 15–24) and the inclusion of young
people with university degrees [
34
]. An evaluation by a private company [
45
] underlined
other positive features of the national policy under the framework of the Youth Guarantee:
the wide territorial distribution, the inclusion of key stakeholders such as employers, local
government, NGOs, labour offices, and private training companies.
These achievements, however, do not compensate the disadvantages of the chosen
approach. A significant fault in the policy is that it is based on the assumption that the
responsibility to improve opportunities for employment falls entirely on the educational
system and the individual and thus tends to turn a structural economic problem into
an individualised one. While recognition of the difficulties in the transition to work for
young people with higher education is a positive strand in the youth employment policy,
placing them together with early school leavers as one in the same scheme results in the
advantageous selection of graduates by the job centre staff. Most neglected by the policy
are the NEET group, young people from the Turkish and Roma ethnic minorities, and those
in poor health [
46
,
47
]. The lack of a differentiated approach by the Youth Guarantee results
in not addressing the needs of other specific groups of young people in highly vulnerable
situations, such as young Roma mothers [48] and rural youths [49].
The Youth Guarantee in Bulgaria is strongly influenced by the trend in European
policy, being led by an “employability agenda”, which assumes that the main causes of
youth unemployment are the inadequate level of young people’s skills. The focus of the
provided measures is on-the-job training at the expense of formal learning [
47
]. Instead
of expanding the opportunities for flexible forms of lifelong learning that would meet the
diverse learning needs of young people, the dominant model is offering employability
training courses with the aim of activating the unemployed [
40
]. Bulgaria is among the
countries with the lowest rate of participation in the forms of lifelong learning, which has
been around 2% in the past 10 years and declined to 1.6% in 2020, which was 6 times lower
than the EU average [41].
3.3. Social Protection
The third main domain of youth policy in Bulgaria—social protection—is rather
fragmented, mixing elements from different welfare state regimes without being able to
reduce the rising social inequalities [
50
]. The reforms in social policy after the regime
change are characterised by a contracting share of state financing and a rising presence of
private capital in the provision of social services [
20
]. The weak welfare services are highly
inadequate for the economic situation in the country, where the population living at risk of
poverty or social exclusion was 33.6% in 2020. Although there has been a 10% reduction in
this share in the past 10 years, Bulgaria still ranks first among the EU member-countries,
where the average was 22% [
41
]. In addition, the country has the highest level of income
inequality in the EU, as measured by the Gini coefficient of equivalised disposable income
(40% in the country compared with the EU average of 30.8%) [
41
]. The increased share
of the “working poor” (from 7.7% to 9.7%) for the past 10 years testifies to the country’s
inability to provide a satisfactory standard of living for the economically active part of the
population [44].
In this situation, young people emerge as the group with minimal social rights, and
this is particularly true in the domain of social security. There is a growing trend of reliance
upon the family in periods of unemployment and job searching [
51
]. The requirements
of having at least 9-month contributions in the last 15 months effectively excludes recent
school and university graduates from receiving unemployment benefits, while the low
amount of the benefits and the short periods of receiving them discourage many eligible
young people from registering with job centres. Similarly restricted for youths is the access
to social assistance in the form of minimum income schemes, housing benefits, and other
services [33].
Societies 2022,12, 97 7 of 19
In the context of present-day Bulgaria, social inequalities among youths have a strong
gender dimension. Despite renewed policy efforts adopting a specific law for equality
among men and women (2016) and a strategy for promoting equality between men and
women (2016), there are significant differences in terms of pay, economic activity, em-
ployment rate, and the share of living at risk of poverty and material deprivation among
the two broad gender categories to the detriment of women [
52
]. Survey evidence from
24 European
countries highlights the considerable gender gaps in Bulgaria, particularly in
terms of the choices for reconciling family and work life [
53
]. Despite the spread of more
egalitarian gender attitudes among young people, factors such as the level of education
and the size of a residence influence the perpetuation of gender inequalities. Thus, for
young women with less education and living in small towns and villages, the possibility
for combining work and family care is not a factor in choosing a particular job because,
for them, the need for financial stability is more important. The practice of taking long
(2 years paid) maternity leave introduced in the 1980s often results in the interruption or
postponement of women’s career development. An interesting finding from this study
is that the higher size of child benefits minimises the importance of work-family balance
in the choice of jobs for both young men and women. Parental leave policies without
strong incentives for equal take up between the parents increase gender inequalities among
youths by impacting their career aspirations and (possibly) result in company managers’
reluctance to employ young women [54].
In conclusion, the main characteristics of the structure of opportunities and constraints
facing young people in their transition to adulthood in Bulgaria are an inflexible and
standardised education system with a trend towards selectivity, limited opportunities for
vocational education and lifelong learning, theoretically oriented higher education, and
segmented access to the labour market with undifferentiated measures for the promotion
of youth employment. The opportunities through developing lifelong learning policies
for the young experiencing difficulties in the formal education system and in their access
to the labour market are rather neglected, and the employment policy focuses on young
people’s employability, understood as readiness for any job, rather than developing their
full potential [
55
]. A less effective social policy does not compensate for the growing social
inequalities, and the concrete set of opportunities for individual transitions is strongly
dependent on parental resources which steer the young in class-dependent trajectories.
4. Data and Methods
The above overview of the social context has as its data source official statistics from
Eurostat [
41
] and the National Statistical Institute [
44
] in Bulgaria. We also used published
policy analysis reviews and the relevant academic literature to allow us to delineate the
main trends in educational and employment outcomes and policy developments since the
collapse of the communist regime in 1989. In order to capture the dynamics of the transition
processes and the meanings the young attach to them, we carried out our own empirical
research with qualitative methods. The main objective of the study was to give an account
of the lived experiences of young people struggling to make the transition to adulthood
and to explore the barriers they had to overcome and the sources of support that they relied
upon in the process.
We conducted biographical interviews with 42 young people aged 18–30 who had
experienced various challenges in their school-to-work trajectories. The interviewers were
two researchers and eight students in social research who were specially trained in this
method. The fieldwork took over 3 months from September to December 2021 to gather
sufficient biographies and illustrate the wide diversity of youth transitions. We did not
start with a fixed model for selection of the interviewees aside from “difficult experiences
in the transition from school to work”, allowing the interviewees to speak for themselves
about the barriers they faced in their access to the labour market. We aimed to cover all
three broad education groups: early school leavers, youths with high school education,
and university graduates, with an equal share of men and women in the groups. We
Societies 2022,12, 97 8 of 19
chose the completed educational level and gender since we considered these as the main
indicators of social inequality in Bulgaria. Having basic and lower education signals a
disadvantaged family background, mostly in terms of poverty and ethnic minority status.
Young people with completed secondary and higher education are more heterogeneous,
coming from families that represent the different layers of the middle class and the upper
layers of the working class. This is largely due to the expansion of recruitment from state
and private universities described in the previous section. We ended up with a rich pool
of interviewees, one fifth of whom had less than obligatory education, one third with
university degrees, and the rest (almost half) being graduates from general and vocational
high schools. This structure of the achieved sample largely corresponds to the distribution
of the general population in the country [
44
]. For the other important structural indicators,
such as living place, housing, and family configurations, we aimed at a maximum diversity,
using the personal contacts of our students in the research methods, whom we also owe
gratitude for carefully transcribing the texts and drawing life lines of the main events in
the individual trajectories.
The interview guide generally followed the method of life story interviewing [
56
]. It
started with a broad question, asking the young persons to present themselves as they
wished and then tell the story of their lives from early childhood to the present. We then
asked more specific questions about their families, friends, education and work experiences,
life projects, and expectations for the future. The interviews lasted between 45 min and an
hour and a half. The young people were assured of their anonymity in the research report
and the opportunity to withdraw from the conversation at any moment.
The full transcripts were read several times by the two researchers and subjected to
coding and categorization following the approach of Corbin and Strauss [
57
]. We first
explored the emerging themes from young people’s narratives, taking account of the
commonalities in young people’s views about the opportunities and constraints they faced
in their journeys. Furthermore, we highlighted the differences in the experiences of the
groups of young people, differentiated by gender and educational level. In a second stage,
we conducted analysis of each transcript as an individual case following the timeline of life
events. In the analysis, we focused on the young people’s agency, differentiating between
the story of events, the personal story, and the choices made at critical moments of the
person’s life. We also looked at the social networks mobilised and the policy opportunities
used (and more often lost) in the transition.
For this paper, we selected to present four case studies of school-to-work transitions
of young people from the two contrasting groups according to their educational level:
young people (a man and a woman) who left school before the obligatory age and two
university graduates (also a man and a woman). This selection was guided by the high
polarization in the educational trends as described in the section on the social context in
Bulgaria: a rise in the numbers of early school leavers and an expansion of recruitment
in higher education. This sheds light on significant intersectional inequalities in Bulgaria
in terms of education (also class and ethnicity) and gender. The four cases allowed us to
highlight the “grey” zones of the Bulgarian youth policies which are unable to meet their
divergent needs. The expectation about polarised dilemmas facing young people is in line
with the findings of a representative survey conducted in 2018 with 1008 men and women
aged 15–29, which measured a high impact of education and gender on youth transitions
to employment [
31
]. It was only young men with basic or lower education that followed
the normative sequence of transition events, starting with finishing school and ending with
parenthood, and this took them 7 years. Women with less education on average achieved
all markers of adulthood in 3 years, in which leaving school, leaving the family home, and
becoming a mother often overlapped. Men and women with higher education followed
much longer transition paths, usually starting with temporary jobs about 4 years before
graduation and with men postponing parenthood much longer than women, although
both groups tended to wait for more stable jobs before becoming parents. Another recent
Societies 2022,12, 97 9 of 19
study also found that family, ethnic and religious background, and the place of living were
strong factors structuring youth transitions to adulthood [50].
5. Young People’s Perspectives on the School-to-Work Transition
The qualitative study produced a picture of diverse and non-linear educational tra-
jectories of young men and women who find themselves in vulnerable situations in the
country. The young people’s narratives demonstrated how quickly and easily their journeys
through the levels of the educational system and in the labour market can be disrupted and
reversed by adverse family events, bullying at school, or health problems. Our analysis
confirmed the findings of other studies both in Bulgaria and other EU countries [
36
,
58
,
59
]
that access to education was no longer a guarantee of its successful completion, and many
students reported feeling excluded from meaningful and satisfactory educational experi-
ences. Young people who left school early often could not find access to relevant programs
of lifelong learning and fell into the trap of hopping from one informal and low-paying
job to another without much or any social protection. Similar to other studies [
40
], we also
found that the young with secondary education and even those from vocational schools
lacked practical training to make a smooth transition into work, while their employers did
not feel obliged or ready to provide quality on-the-job training. For their part, university
graduates struggled with significant skill mismatches, so many continued performing
unqualified jobs after receiving their diplomas or turned to accumulating degrees without
building a career. A common theme discussed in the biographical interviews was that the
young did not trust the available policy measures to improve their chances for employment
and preferred to rely on relatives and friends. They did not perceive public institutions as
their partners but rather as barriers to improving their employment situations.
The interviewees were largely aware of the structural constraints that faced them on
the road to adulthood but did not consider themselves as “belonging to a vulnerable group”
or a “group at risk”, as the discourse in the policy documents defined them. Another
common feature in their interpretations of the transitions from education to the labour
market, confirming the findings of previous studies [
60
], was young people’s conviction
that they should rely on “their own efforts” to find a way out of difficult situations. They
did not consider themselves as incapable to work in the aspired jobs and believed that,
given the chance, they would make a successful integration into the world of work. It is
also important to note that the young placed the school-to-work transition into a wider life
frame, considering other transitions such as relationships, housing, and forming a family.
Despite the diverse challenges, most of the interviewees were rather positive about
their individual futures and commented on their more or less defined life projects. Even the
COVID-19 pandemic did not turn out to be a major obstacle in the transition of this group
of youths who had already left the formal education system, although all felt its impact.
A few lost their temporary jobs due to the restrictions imposed on businesses in the past
2 years
. Others pointed at the decline of interpersonal trust that affected their informal jobs
in the first months after the virus was officially registered in the country. However, none of
the interviewees considered that the pandemic would continue to limit their opportunities
in the future and saw other mostly economic barriers as having a greater significance.
Furthermore, we focused on the life trajectories of four young people, drawing atten-
tion to the role of agency vis-à-vis the structure of opportunities and constraints that they
faced in their transitions from school to work. As explained in the previous section, we
selected two cases of early school leavers and two cases of university graduates with one
man and one woman in each group and explored the changing impact of education and
gender in the process. The young people’s stories highlighted the moments of biographical
sense-making of the events and reflections on the choices in their transitions, thus revealing
the internal dynamic of the transition, which is not a single act but a process.
Societies 2022,12, 97 10 of 19
5.1. Marin: “I Have to Fight No Matter How Hard It Is”
Marin is a 25-year-old man from a small town located in southern Bulgaria close to
the border with Greece and Turkey. Agriculture is the dominant sector of the regional
economy, with wine and tobacco growing as the most popular livelihoods. Marin lives
with his mother and grandfather in the old family house. Both his parents have finished
high school and have worked in farming. A critical moment for the whole family was the
father’s death when Marin was only 14 years of age. Taking sole responsibility for the
financial survival of the household into her hands, his mother went to work in domestic
care in Greece. This was a turning point in Marin’s life, forcing him to make important
decisions at a very young age:
. . .
I had a very difficult childhood. One of the biggest difficulties in my life was
that I was left without a father as a teenager, and soon after that my mother had
to go abroad to look for work. I was too young then and had to fend for myself
. . .
It helped that I am a fighter and do not give up easily. I am used to fighting
no matter how hard it is.”
Marin conveys his life story as a struggle against an unfavourable context. He is aware
of the structural limitations of his trajectory to autonomy in comparison with his peers. Left
without paternal support and relying on the limited help received from his grandfather,
his coping strategy was to give up formal schooling and search for work that would bring
income. This was “the most natural decision” for him, as he did not attribute a high value
to education. Marin describes his experiences with schooling as boring, which he associates
with his lack of interest in learning:
“The knowledge I gained was basic, because I didn’t have much interest in
learning
. . .
When I was a kid at school, the teachers tried hard to make me study,
but I was quite a naughty child, I hated the school discipline
. . .
It was quite
difficult for me to focus on learning, and after my father died I had to work and
support myself. Besides, my mother could not convince me to stay at school
while she was abroad.”
Leaving school with only a seventh-grade education, Marin remained without a
completed primary education. He changed many low-skill jobs, which for some time
satisfied him as he managed to “make ends meet”. His coping experiences included a trip
to Greece to live with his mother, and there, he first worked in different farms and then in
a store house loading and unloading trucks. He explained his decision to return back to
Bulgaria as due to dissatisfaction with the pay he received for the hard physical labour that
he was performing as well as with a growing feeling of sadness and longing for his home
and friends. Upon his return, the young man started working on various construction
sites, combining this with two summer trips to England, where he picked strawberries and
raspberries on a farm. Marin was very satisfied with the latter activity, considering it a
well-paid job, but this opportunity ended with the spread of COVID-19 and the various
restrictions that followed.
At the time of the interview, Marin’s hectic career was again in a limbo with irregular
and informal jobs on various construction sites. In his words, his low educational level
was proving to be a serious obstacle to finding satisfactory employment. It is only now,
when the aspirations to find a better job and start a family are emerging, that he realises the
consequences of the choices he made in his teenage years:
“I work in construction mostly as a general labourer and sometimes as a bricklayer.
I find work by going around visiting sites and asking if they needed a man. Oddly
enough, I enjoy doing this work. The problem is that it’s not regular and the
pay is low
. . .
At the moment I’m thinking about going abroad again, when the
Corona is over, because without complete primary education it’s hard for me to
find a job here
. . .
At this stage it’s important for me to earn money to fix my
house and find a wife to start a family with.”
Societies 2022,12, 97 11 of 19
Marin is not satisfied with how his transition from education to work is developing,
blaming both the “circumstances” and his own decision to quit school. At present, he
describes his financial situation as difficult. During spells without a job, he relies mainly on
his mother’s help for money. Support from state institutions proved inaccessible to young
people with Marin’s work history. In the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, he tried to
register at the job centre as unemployed but could not provide the required documents.
He would like “to do something to finish at least primary school”, but the need to provide
for himself stops him from going back to school. At this stage in his life, Marin’s main
aspiration is to find a better paying job, for which he will probably try searching abroad.
His dream is earning and saving enough to be able to renovate the family house and start a
family of his own. In terms of preferred work, Marin’s dream is to have a farm of his own.
Marin’s school-to-work transition is a testament to how a critical moment in childhood
can impact an individual’s life trajectory in education and work. Faced with economic
constraints and limited parental support, as well as a lack of adequate help from educational
and social services, he made an early decision to leave school that now poses multiple
barriers to his access to employment, and his working career is mostly in the informal
economy. He is left without any support from employers or public employment agencies
despite being eligible for some of the schemes under the Youth Guarantee. He has not
considered turning to professionals for advice and information about training opportunities.
His agency in the form of perseverance and diligence is the main factor that has helped
him cope in a vulnerable situation and still make plans “for a normal life”.
5.2. Vasilka: “The Foster Home Is the Place where I Find the People I Love”
Vasilka is a 19-year-old woman of Roma ethnicity. She lives in a small town in central
Bulgaria. She grew up in a residential institution and does not know who her parents are.
In telling her life story, she stresses several times that she sees her mentor as her “true
mother”. Similarly, she names the foster home as her “home”, or “the place where I find
the people I love”. Situated in the outskirts of a large town, being outside of the suburbs
with predominantly ethnic minority populations, it is the only source of support for the
young woman. She has had bad experiences at school, being bullied by her classmates, and
left at the age of 14 due to a psychological disorder that she has been suffering from for
several years:
“I didn’t go to school regularly because I was mentally ill. That’s what the
psychologists say, the psychiatrists. The ones who treated me. I don’t know what
they call themselves exactly. They said that I was addicted to people and objects
. .. I did not acquire much knowledge because I was often absent from classes.”
Vasilka has been evaluated as “functionally illiterate”, which creates serious difficulties
for her in the everyday contacts with people and her job search. In her view, it is not only
her lack of education but also her ethnicity that places barriers on her efforts to create
a life of her own. Similar to the experiences of other youth from the Roma minority, as
demonstrated by various research publications in Bulgaria [
38
,
48
], the young woman has
been treated with prejudice and unfairness both at school and in the labour market. Without
naming it as “discrimination”, she describes the negative reactions she receives regularly
from strangers: “They look at me differently
. . .
They say: Run away from here! You are a
thief; you are dirty
. . .
There are also people for whom I work privately. They also behave
like that”.
Her working career lists a few temporary jobs in cleaning and seasonal farming. “I
often go with some other friends to clean houses. Last time I cleaned the Eco toilets. Usually
in the spring we work picking rose blossoms and whatever is in season. I’m not working
now”. Vasilka is always short of money and often cannot meet her basic needs. She has
never visited a job centre where she could have received training or other support with
employment. Her coping strategy includes reliance on support from the foster home and
finding occasional jobs that bring money. A happy day for her is “to have money for
food and for a bingo game
. . .
I can’t stop going to the bingo”. In the town where she
Societies 2022,12, 97 12 of 19
lives, there are many bingo halls that sprang up quickly after gambling was prohibited in
neighbouring Turkey.
Vasilka does not have any concrete life prospects, hoping she could stay in the foster
home for years to come. She mentions that her mentor is trying to convince her to start
studying as a private pupil in order to receive a diploma so that she can get a secure job,
but the young woman does not believe she will manage such an endeavour. “The lady
wants to prepare me for the matriculation exams, but I am sure I will fail”. In her dreams,
she has a lucrative job “somewhere abroad” and has a family with two children. Her family
transition is also at a standstill. “Most of the Roma girls my age are already married and
have several children”. However, she lacks the supportive ethnic networks who could ease
her family formation. The young woman faces a wide range of constraints—deficiency
of proper education and relevant treatment for her mental illness as well as a gambling
addiction—and these are intensified by her belonging to a discriminated ethnic minority in
the country. Vasilka lacks self-confidence and has not received adequate help to develop
self-reflection and agency. The social protection agency has provided housing, food, and
emotional support during childhood but not proper educational and training services or
advice to make her ready for an independent life. All in all, the institutional policy has
failed Vasilka in her life transitions and left her in a particularly vulnerable situation.
5.3. Teodor: “When You Know What You Really Want, You Will Eventually Achieve It”
Teodor belongs to the group of young people with higher education who also experi-
ence difficulties in their transition to adulthood, albeit of a different nature to those in the
group of early school leavers. He is 27 years old and lives with his parents in a small village
near a large city in northern Bulgaria. His parents belong to the working class and have
attended school up to the obligatory age. He has a 5-year-old daughter who lives with her
mother in the city, and Teodor pays monthly child support in addition to making regular
visits to spend time with his child. Teodor is the first of the family to go to university
and receive a BA diploma. Family relations (with his parents) are of high importance for
the young man, and in his interview, he gave a lengthy account of their interactions. The
parents are a source of emotional support and advice for him in addition to providing a
home and money. In contrast, he is not ready to comment on his relations with the mother
of his child. The young man refers to his own parenthood as “a huge responsibility” which
he sees mostly in financial terms.
Teodor made his first steps in the labour market during his university studies. Within
a year and a half, he changed jobs three times, which he found through newspaper ad-
vertisements. At these temporary jobs, he experienced both unfair treatment from his
employers and fatigue from the long and exhausting work shifts. He soon felt it was im-
possible to continue working and studying and decided to focus on his education, relying
on financial support from his family. After successfully obtaining his university diploma,
Teodor returned to his parents’ house. Despite his BA in journalism, the young man could
not start a working career in this field. His coping strategy was to look for a “temporary”
job and soon started working as a bartender in a local restaurant. Although the job did not
correspond to his university qualifications and the pay was not very high, he found some
satisfaction in it:
“What I liked about this job was that the restaurant had a very cool staff, mostly
young people,
. . .
and that I had time for myself
. . .
and the employer was a
decent man
. . .
I got along with the staff, everything was in order. I wouldn’t
change the job just for another one with a higher pay.”
However, the restaurant was closed during the first year of the pandemic, and Teodor
registered as unemployed with the labour office and started receiving unemployment
benefits. The young man was among the few of our interviewees who had turned to a state
employment service and received financial support which, however, was so limited that
his parents often had to add money to his daily expenses. Still, it was not the financial need
that bothered him most. He felt a strain on his mental health. He stopped meeting friends
Societies 2022,12, 97 13 of 19
and rarely went out of the house. What Teodor describes as a critical moment in his life
is not linked to a particular event but to a moment of self-reflection and decision making.
It was during his current stage of unemployment, this time for more than a year, that he
decided upon a change in his job search strategy and more generally in his life orientation.
This shift came after a long talk with his parents, and he felt that he was finally coming out
of “the mist of passiveness”. As a result, he gave up his high aspirations and set up realistic
goals, which he is now determined to pursue:
“The important thing for me at this stage of my life is to raise as much money
as possible to get a Master’s degree in pedagogy, become a teacher and be able
to provide a brighter future for me and my daughter
. . .
I have chosen my first
university education without thinking much what happens after graduation and
what kind of work I will be able to get
. . .
My parents did not interfere or impose
any choice. In their youth they had goals that they followed and they knew what
they wanted to do, and
. . .
whoever has goals is successful
. . .
For me, there were
times when I didn’t have any goals, but with the help of my parents, I changed
my thinking in a positive way and with time I started thinking sensibly like them
and that’s how I built my new goals in life. When you know what you really
want, you will eventually achieve it.”
It was only recently that Teodor experienced his insightful moment and is now eager to
start studying for a master’s degree in education. In order to join such a program, however,
he would need to find another low-qualification job to be able to pay the university fees.
He is convinced that in time he will find the desired employment. He dreams of becoming
a teacher and working with children. He believes that this job will finally help him create a
more secure present for himself and his family.
Teodor’s life trajectory is marked with early parenthood and the breakdown of a young
family. He felt forced to care for his child from afar and felt obliged to take up any kind of
work in order to be able to support himself and his daughter financially. The employment
office provided financial support for some time but no career advice or training, and he is
not included in any of the schemes under the Youth Guarantee, although he is eligible. As
a result, he often has to rely on his parents’ support again, and achieving autonomy seems
to be a faraway goal. Despite his disappointment with the temporary jobs he managed to
obtain, at present, Teodor considers that he has a concrete life project and a clear vision of
what kind of job he prefers and how to achieve it.
5.4. Tanya: “I Am Free to Pursue My Own Dreams”
Tanya is 25 years old and lives with her parents in a small town near the country’s
capital. She is among the most successful of our interviewees, having lived independently,
finished university, and had work experience in her field of study. However, at the time
of the interview, she was out of a job, living with her parents, and aspiring to a life in the
big city. Tanya rented a flat while studying at Sofia University, and upon graduation, she
returned back to the family home. She explained her choice as “the most natural decision”,
similar to Teodor’s account, since her relationship with her parents was “very good, almost
as being friends”. Additionally, like Teodor, her family background was that of the working
class. Her parents finished secondary school only and were currently working low-skill
jobs in pharmacy, where their pay had been significantly raised during the 2 years of the
pandemic. The financial stability of the parental family plays an important role in the
young woman’s life strategy. Tanya admires her parents for their hard work as well as
for the financial and emotional support they are always ready to offer. She feels she has
the freedom to make autonomous decisions. “My parents did not influence my choice of
education or job
. . .
I am similar to them in that I pursue my own dreams as they had done
when young”.
Tanya has a bachelor’s degree in accounting and considers her studies at the univer-
sity very useful in providing solid knowledge as well as allowing her to make valuable
friendships. What she thinks she lacked in her education was “more practice in real work
Societies 2022,12, 97 14 of 19
settings”, a phrase that regularly figures in official policy documents in Bulgaria, indicating
their preferences for “employability”. She worked two summer jobs as a sales consultant
in a sportswear shop and a bookstore. During her studies at university, she applied for
and successfully finished three unpaid internships in her specialty, which she found herself
on job search sites and at a job fare. Then, in her hometown, she quickly secured her first
job upon graduation. Since then, she changed her workplace twice, experiencing brief
moments of unemployment during which she did not register with the labour office as she
relied on her parents’ support:
“My last job was an operational accountant in a small firm. I found this place
through a job search site and I liked everything about it at the beginning. I
planned to stay at this job for a longer period of time but then on certain days
there was a lot of stress to meet deadlines and the boss was shouting at all of us. I
felt there was no point staying there any longer. I wasn’t learning anything new
and then why to bear such a treatment?
. . .
My main goal at this stage is career
development, not just earning money.”
She explained that she has not used the services of the job centres in Sofia or in her
hometown during unemployment as she does not expect them to have good job offers.
She is convinced that employers only register job vacancies with the state services that
nobody wants. Having a rather smooth educational trajectory, she still faced difficulties in
the labour market. What is more, she experienced intimidating behaviour from her last
employer, which led to her leaving the job instead of looking for support from institutions.
Relying on generous parental support, she has chosen further education as the next step in
achieving her ambitious goals.
Tanya’s interview attests to her agency, combined with a strong determination to
achieve her goals. The meaning she attaches to her current stage of inactivity is “waiting
for the normalisation after the last COVID wave”. She has very concrete career plans:
obtaining a master’s degree in finance in 2 years, gaining work experience in a large
company in Sofia for 3 years, and then, after 5 years, founding her own accounting house
in the big city. “In ten years I see myself established professionally and feeling much more
confident in myself”. It would be after that achievement that she would think about family
and children.
Tanya presents herself as an autonomous young woman, pragmatic and consistent
in her educational and employment choices. She describes her patchy working career of
short-term jobs and future work plans with the same admirable detail. Her practically
oriented education and successful internships definitely contribute to her persistent agency.
Obviously, having well-to-do and supportive parents also influences her feeling of stability,
despite being out of a job currently and the lack of successful work experience.
6. Conclusions
In this paper, we tried to go deeper into the interplay between opportunity structures
and the subjective agency of young people in the process of major life transitions. We first
presented the specific features of the social context in Bulgaria by following the main trends
in education and employment and highlighted some of the deficiencies in the education,
labour market, and social policies targeting youths and their transitions from school to
work. Thus, following the regime change in the 1989, two contrasting trends have emerged:
one towards a rise in early school leaving and one towards expansion of higher education.
The education and training system has not developed innovative forms flexible enough
to meet the diverse needs of young men and women on different educational paths and
with various health, family, and financial resources. While school drop-outs were gradually
declining before the pandemic, the restrictive measures reversed this trend. Additionally,
students’ academic achievements at all levels have become more dependent on income and
other forms of social inequality, and the social policy in the country is not targeted towards
compensating for such deficiencies. Vocational education remains underdeveloped, and
university studies are still not in line with the current trends of economic development. The
Societies 2022,12, 97 15 of 19
youth unemployment rate is below the EU average, but underemployment and work in
the informal economy are characteristic for the youth labour market. At the same time, the
employment policy focuses on increasing young people’s employability, steering them to
work placements without adequate training and a lack of control over the role employers
play in the process. While including those with higher education in the Youth Guarantee
schemes is a justified recognition for the problems in their labour market access [
34
], it
nevertheless is not matched with adequate attention and efforts to address the needs of
those with less than obligatory education. The young in most vulnerable situations are
overlooked by the professionals in job centres, who tend to select those with better chances
to stay in the schemes until the end, with success measured quantitatively. Gender is
another significant factor for structuring youth transitions in the country. Young women
have profited the most from the expansion of educational opportunities in higher education
in the country, increasing their involvement in university programs while delaying their
transition to motherhood. In contrast to the high female employment rates in the centrally
planned economy [
26
], 30 years later, women comprise the bulk of the inactive group of
NEET. Young women with lesser educations more often than not have a short transition
to work and family. However, this does not represent a privileged situation in the labour
market, as they only have access to low-paying and insecure jobs. As was found in other
studies [
61
,
62
], the COVID-19 pandemic further increased both old and new inequalities
among young people.
Our qualitative study revealed the various challenges in the long and winding road of
youth transitions to adulthood in the country. The four trajectories of young people that
we portrayed in the paper illustrate the complex relationships between the uniqueness of
each case and the context in which the cases are embedded. The case of the Roma woman
represents a highly vulnerable situation and the inefficacy of the country’s social policy
not only to offer time-limited social protection and emotional help but to empower young
women with accumulated disadvantages [
63
] in their transitions to autonomy. For young
men with only primary or lower education, the transition takes longer as they feel the
responsibility to provide for their family, but the jobs that they manage to acquire are
in low-paying work, often being temporary and in the informal economy. Their coping
strategy is searching for a better-paying job, and their income is insecure, so they cannot
afford much beyond the minimum daily necessities. Any paid forms of education or
training are beyond their means. In this vulnerable situation, they find it impossible to
obtain adequate educational and training opportunities. This is also valid for their access
to the services of state institutions, offering unemployment support in the form of benefits,
training, or mediation. For the group of young men and women with lesser education,
the support channels are limited to the closest circle of relatives and friends, who are in
difficult financial situations themselves. In most cases, the best solution perceived by the
young who have dropped out of the education system too early is emigration, as their
expectations are for a friendly labour market in the more developed European countries
with lots of low-qualification jobs and better pay. Their agency involves various coping
mechanisms, moving from one insecure job to another while improving their educational
credentials prove impossible because of the lack of financial resources and time that they
have to invest in the endeavor. Ethnic discrimination is also a structuring factor limiting
the effect of subjective agency [37,38].
For young people with higher education, career development is of higher importance,
but they are often faced with a lack of jobs in their university specialties. The young
graduates take up low-qualification jobs, viewing them as temporary solutions before
embarking on the desired career tracks. In their job search strategies, the quality of the
working environment and team relations are also highly valued, in addition to the higher
remuneration. Trainees often have to combine their university studies with temporary and
precarious employment as their first work experience which, to a large extent, shapes their
views on work and their requirements for the “ideal” workplace. The parents of those
young men and women are the main and preferred source of financial support. While this
Societies 2022,12, 97 16 of 19
group of young people reported greater access to and actual experience of institutional
support during unemployment, this proves insufficient financially and even less so in terms
of advice and training. Young people often have to rely upon the help offered by parents,
which gives them a sense of security and the opportunity to take time to reflect upon their
current situations and plan more adequately for the future. The transition to employment
can be consistent, based on preset goals and clear strategies to achieve them, but also and
more often fragmented, led by imageries of a desired future, since there are no resources
available to achieve them quickly. Both young men and women with higher education are
more reflexive on the structural limitations and more likely to devise their own life projects.
Young women, however, feel stronger time pressure to limit their career plans and direct
their agency towards a secure job before starting a family.
Unlike some recent studies which have focused on exploring the social impact of
lifelong learning programs in European countries [
64
,
65
] and the created typologies of
youth trajectories, our research design did not aim to evaluate the Bulgarian policy measures
in support of youth transitions. We presented the policy programs as ingredients of the
social context but did not select our interviewees from the participants of such policy
programs. The starting point of our empirical research was to look for raptured youth
transitions and then to highlight the hindrances experienced and opportunities mobilised
by the transition actors themselves. That is why in the narratives of our sample of Bulgarian
youth some policy schemes were rarely mentioned and even more rarely used. We came to
the conclusion that the state institutions in Bulgaria applied a very limited range of support
programs to tackle the diverse problems and difficulties faced by young people in their
journey to autonomy. Most often, the young either did not know or did not trust the official
policy measures. Our findings suggest that rather than grouping all youths as “at risk”
together, a more individualised approach by experts and street-level professionals is needed
to overcome important institutional “holes” and address the employment challenges in
front of young people in diverse vulnerable situations.
In this paper, we drew on the life course perspective, applying a case study approach
to youth transitions. We did not just pick up the cases as already existing stories but
constructed them as complex constellations of various dimensions [
66
]. Focusing on
specific cases allowed us to take into account the uniqueness of the various life journeys
from education to employment and their biographical dimensions [
67
]. A similar approach
has been used for international comparisons of youth transitions [
7
,
68
,
69
]. While comparing
cases in one national context, our paper still managed to highlight different configurations
of the link between the context and the cases. We consider that this strategy enabled our
analysis to dive deeper into the interplay between opportunity structures and individual
agency and better understand the combined effect of the inequalities in education and
gender in youth transitions.
Author Contributions:
Conceptualization, S.K.; methodology, investigation and formal analysis, S.K.
and D.H.; Project administration and writing—original draft preparation, S.K. and D.H; Validation
and writing—review and editing, S.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of
the manuscript.
Funding: This research received no external funding.
Institutional Review Board Statement:
The study was conducted in accordance with the Decla-
ration of Helsinki, and the Ethics Code of the Bulgarian Sociological Association, and approved
by the University Ethics Committee of Paisii Hilendarski University of Plovdiv (protocol code 21,
16 September 2021).
Informed Consent Statement:
Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.
Data Availability Statement:
The data presented from this study can be made available on reasonable
request from the corresponding author.
Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Societies 2022,12, 97 17 of 19
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... The Special Issue focuses on the interface between public policies and the experience of young people in Bulgaria, Finland, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Morocco and the United Kingdom. On the one hand, the articles discuss institutional aspects such as education policies [3][4][5], regulation of migration [6], or programs that foster international mobility and inclusion of diverse students in higher education institutions [7,8], building upon desk research and statistical and other quantitative analyses. On the other hand, some contributions draw on hermeneutical [9], ethnographical [10], narrative [11], and other qualitative methods to spell out the experiences of these young people in their life transitions. ...
... Public discourses about the transformations of education and employment widely disseminated during the period of emergency; however, individuals enact their own construal of social conditions and their own understanding of public discourses amid the social relations that they establish with other people in their situation, their peer groups, their families and the street-level officers of employment and education services. Opportunity structures are enacted in the interactions between professionals and young adults and the ambitious goals of education, training and lifelong learning policies can be achieved only when they are meaningful for the people involved in their implementation-a common finding of many of the papers included in the Special Issue [3][4][5][6]. ...
... The big picture should not conceal the specific connections between migration and inequality. Two of the articles in the Special Issue [5,10] observe that in origin countries as different as Bulgaria and Morocco, certain groups of youth imagine what migration could bring to them. Remarkably, besides cultural readings of migration and variable social bonds with their families, in both cases, the youth elaborate (or at least sketch) migration projects depending on their experience of the social inequalities that affect their families and their own perspectives. ...
Article
Full-text available
We are living at a time of educational expansion in most parts of the world, which creates new opportunity structures for young people [...]
... Refer to the work by sociologistsKovacheva & Hristozova (2022); economistCordón-Lagares et al. (2022); education and labour specialist Jim Allen & Rolf Van Der Velden(2007); youth studies Anne Görlich(2019); demographer Shuang Chen 2018; and urban and economic GeographerBuckley (2012Buckley ( & 2013 to further engage with how unidirectional education-to-work transitions are often challenged by factors such as precarious labour prospects caused by larger national and global economic restructuring. ...
Thesis
Full-text available
The Himalayan region of Nepal consists of some of the world's most remote villages. Yet with globalizing agendas stressing the need for all children under the age of 18 to have access to formal education and ethical work arrangements extending throughout Nepal, young people have been increasingly migrating to pursue opportunities both domestically and internationally. Despite many young migrants intending to return, this out-migration leaves many villages with immediate labour shortages for sectors such as agriculture and healthcare, as has been widely documented. This dissertation explores those moments when young people return to their birth villages to engage in work that could fund their higher education or contribute to social-change initiatives, and how such processes factor into larger and new circular migration patterns across the Himalayas. The dissertation engages Participatory Action Research (PAR) with 148 Himalayan youth participants (including four youth co-researchers) in order to explore the effects of youth return migration on remote Himalayan villages. I also pair PAR with semi-structured interviews, focus groups sessions, and art-based methods to gain a deeper understanding of the Life Course Transitions (LCTs) of youth participants, with a focus on education and work experiences. I first iii engage with a call for more participation of young people in research by complicating the social variable of age in the (sub)discipline of Children's Geographies. Through collaborative PAR with co-researchers, I present complex LCTs of Himalayan young people in ways that operate outside of chronological age-based logics of transition, such as unidirectional transitions from education to work. I then engage how embodied connections of complex configurations and sometimes inseparable relationships between education and work lead participants to describe such lived experiences as education-work dynamics. This dissertation ends with co-researchers and participants using PAR to participate in disaster management responses by mobilizing youth-led initiatives during the 2015 earthquake and the COVID-19 pandemic in Nepal, primarily in the Himalayas. Through the initiatives, participants also engage their education-work dynamics to address concerns and promote changes regarding social inequalities related to gender, age, and caste-based discrimination, and inadequate educational and healthcare access across remote Himalayan villages. iv
... As already mentioned, Roma women are particularly excluded in multiple, interlaced ways from society (Stoilova, 2022). As they often have their first child at a young age, they face multiple barriers to educational and labour market participation (Kovacheva & Hristozova, 2022). All these factors contribute to the low levels of education and employment of young Roma women and may also cement employers' perceptions of them. ...
Chapter
Full-text available
Negative attitudes and prejudices against Roma job seekers in Bulgaria are widespread, limit their economic activity and reinforce social exclusion. Referring to organizational, statistical, and ‘taste’-based concepts of discrimination and based on qualitative survey data with 96 recruiters collected in 2016, this study asks how ethnicity matters for companies in Bulgaria. The findings show that ethnic discrimination in recruitment attempts to protect companies from the risk of anticipated difficulties with new employees. Ethnicity is used as symbolic and organizational resource for trouble avoidance, ensuring perceived service and product quality.
... Measures are based on acquiring competencies and individual skills, leaving young people responsible for their precarious situation (Cabasés & Úbeda, 2021). In Bulgaria, the analysis shows a minimal range of support programmes to tackle the diverse problems and difficulties young people face (Kovacheva & Hristozova, 2022). The vulnerability of NEETs is related to low education and poverty (Mussida & Sciulli, 2023;Nestić & Tomić, 2018;Papadakis et al., 2019;Vugt et al., 2022). ...
Article
Full-text available
This article aims to analyse active labour market policy efficiency for rural young NEETs integration into the labour market in the socioeconomic context of rural municipalities in Lithuania. For the empirical analysis, the administrative data of the public employment service concerning active labour market policy measures, e.g., training and mobility support, subsidised employment, and support for establishing or adapting workplaces of 2018 and 2022, as well as Lithuanian statistics data of 2018 and 2020 are used. The socio-economic environment of rural municipalities was analysed using the economic indicators (complex index), public transport accessibility, average wage, and free vacancies indicators. The recipient’s integration into employment after six months of participation in active labour market policy measures is analysed. The data revealed poor economic indicators, undeveloped public transport, lower average salaries, and a need for more vacancies in rural municipalities. The integration into employment fell significantly in two rural municipality clusters after the Covid-19 pandemic.
... An overall outcome is that whether they follow an academic or any other route, and at whichever age and level they exit for the labour market, many young Europeans face "a long winding road" (Kovacheva and Hristozova, 2022), changing jobs many times before finding one in which they wish and are able to settle. All types and levels of education have become less reliable in terms of the kinds of employment to which they lead. ...
... Apart from being sometimes wrongly used as a descriptive concept related to youth, the transition to adulthood has been the most studied of various life course transitions (see e.g. Kovacheva and Hristozova 2022). I agree with the standpoint that the transition from education to employment is central to the transition to adulthood (Heinz 2009a;Roberts 2018). ...
Article
Full-text available
The paper is based on my longitudinal qualitative study, which takes a “social biography approach” to exploring and interpreting biographical sequences in a person’s life course from early childhood to young adulthood. Against the background of a recent debate that argues for bringing “life” back to life course research through the implementa­tion of qualitative data, the paper explores how life course studies could gain from taking a social biography approach to youth transitions. I focus on analysing education-to-work transitions within the biographies of a young woman and a young man from working-class families. The analysis shows that their education-to-work transitions were not based on linear trajectories, but their decision-making agency was path-dependent on their previous agency in differ­ent biographical contexts, and also linked to the lives of significant others. I argue that there is a heuristic benefit to including reflexivity within a study of the life course through the actors’ interpretation of the impact of coun­try-specific “opportunity structures” on their education and employment. Analysis of the two biographies has also revealed that the emotions and satisfaction displayed in the actors’ reflections also had an impact on their agency in relation to education and work. After discussing the compatibility of the social biography approach with life course studies, I conclude that life course studies benefit from including a biographisation to the contextualisation of transition process.
Article
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This comprehensive collection discusses topical issues essential to both scholarship and policy making in the realm of Lifelong Learning policies and how far they succeed in supporting young people across their life courses, rather than one-sidedly fostering human capital for the economy. Examining specific regional and local contexts across Europe, all various in context, this book uses original research to evaluate differences in scope, approach, orientation, and objectives. It enquires into the embedding of LLL policies into the regional economy, the labour market, education and training systems and the individual life projects of young people, with focus on those in situations of near social exclusion.
Book
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Open Access book - download at https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-96454-2#about-book-content This open access book explores different landscapes of Lifelong Learning policies (LLP), producing case-based examinations of their institutional, discursive, and relational dimensions. Across Europe, young people develop their life courses amidst diverse living conditions and are confronted with a variety of institutional and structural arrangements that impact on their opportunities in education and labour. Considering the relevance of LLP in shaping those opportunities, the chapters draw from multi-level, mixed-methods research and offer original insights on the interplay of discourses and governance patterns in the processes of policy-making and deliverance. The book yields noteworthy insights into the widely differing realities across the European landscape, and also into the diverging ways young people deal with and actively participate in LLP. Sebastiano Benasso is Senior Assistant Professor at the Department of Educational Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy. His research focuses on biographical transitions, generations and youth cultures. Dejana Bouillet is Professor at the Faculty of Teacher Education, University of Zagreb, Croatia. She teaches inclusive and social pedagogy and researches a wide range of etiological, phenomenological and intervention aspects of socialisation problems of youths. Tiago Neves is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Psychology and Education Sciences at the University of Porto, Portugal. His research focuses on social and educational inequalities, in particular on compensatory education and access to higher education. Marcelo Parreira do Amaral is Professor of International and Comparative Education at the University of Münster, Germany. His main research interests include international comparative education, education policy, international educational governance and its implications for educational trajectories.
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Drawing on two interrelated areas of youth work, outreach youth work as a place of coordination of work, social benefits and social services, and youth workshops as a place for work training for young people “at risk”, our aim in this article is to analyse how young people in poor financial circumstances are governed through policies and practices in these institutions in Finland. Based on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews with young people and professionals working with young people, we ask how the subjectivities of young people “at risk” (and particularly those in debt and poverty) are shaped in the context of economic vulnerability. This shaping is not only from top-down dimensional formation of a subject, but also from the multidimensional flow of power/knowledge via subjects that sometimes possess opportunities of acting otherwise, as delineated in the end of our analysis. In the context of ubiquitous neoliberal governmentality, we delineated a landscape of survival strategies for economically vulnerable young people in these power/knowledge relations.
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The present article is a study of the opportunities and constraints for youth transitions from education to employment vis-a-vi the structural relationships (of compliance and discrepancy) between the sectors of education, training and the labor market. The analysis examines the deficiencies in the coordination of the demand and supply of skills in Bulgaria, which hinder the successful employment integration of the current young generation. The mismatches in the system are highlighted on the national and the regional level where we focus on the contextual cases of Blagoevgrad and Plovdiv functional regions. The paper reveals that there is a discrepancy between labor supply and demand in the skills systems in both regions where less than half of university graduates work in the specialty they have acquired during studies. One of the conclusions of the study is that social changes under way require new strategies and approaches of lifelong learning policies that should go deeper into the regional and local level taking into account both the needs of young people for training throughout their lives and the needs of the regional labor markets.
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This book takes a gendered life course perspective, analysing and comparing the biographies of men and women employed in similar public and private sector organisations across seven European countries (Bulgaria, Norway, Portugal Sweden, The Netherlands, Slovenia and the UK) who become working parents. Based on an innovative multi-layered contextual approach, this case based cross-national study examines the ways in which young men and women negotiate the transition to motherhood and fatherhood and how they manage their childcare and employment commitments. Based on in-depth biographical interviews, the book offers a detailed understanding of working parents' lived experiences as mothers and fathers, locating them within national institutional frameworks, workplaces, and family contexts. It provides rich insight into how policies and practices at the institutional level play out in individual and family lives, how they shape the decisions during both transition phases and in mothers' and fathers' daily experiences of juggling work and family life. It highlights some difficult and complex issues about the sustainability of contemporary working practices for bringing up children that are highly relevant in times of economic retrenchment.
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This article draws on interviews with 164 young beneficiaries (of) and 128 professionals in charge of lifelong learning policies in eighteen regions located in nine member states of the European Union in 2017. Drawing on the concept of ‘opportunity structures’, we analyse variations between regional institutional arrangements and interactions between professionals and young adults. Our findings suggest that the crux of lifelong learning policies is the coordination between different policy areas so that they can respond to the multidimensional challenges that young adults face during their life transitions in diverse regional contexts.
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While Australia has experienced low COVID-19 case numbers relative to other countries, it has witnessed severe economic consequences in the wake of the pandemic. The hospitality industry, in which young adults are overrepresented, has been among the most affected industries. In this article, we present findings from an interview and a digital methods-based study of young hospitality workers in the Australian cities of Melbourne and Newcastle who lost shifts or employment due to the pandemic. We argue that the participants’ ability to cope with the loss of work was mediated by the degree of family support that they could access, with some experiencing the pandemic as an inconvenience, while others suffered extreme financial hardship. Findings from this study show that the most severe impacts of the pandemic play out along pre-existing lines of inequality and marginality, causing the most severe consequences for those who were already most vulnerable to them.
Article
The Covid-19 pandemic is shaking fundamental assumptions about the human life course in societies around the world. In this essay, we draw on our collective expertise to illustrate how a life course perspective can make critical contributions to understanding the pandemic’s effects on individuals, families, and populations. We explore the pandemic’s implications for the organization and experience of life transitions and trajectories within and across central domains: health, personal control and planning, social relationships and family, education, work and careers, and migration and mobility. We consider both the life course implications of being infected by the Covid-19 virus or attached to someone who has; and being affected by the pandemic’s social, economic, cultural, and psychological consequences. It is our goal to offer some programmatic observations on which life course research and policies can build as the pandemic’s short- and long-term consequences unfold.
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This chapter focuses on Youth Guarantee (YG) as a quick response to youth unemployment in Bulgaria. It analyses the use of financial mechanisms for tackling social challenges and governing policy in adult education. The chapter draws attention to governance structure, management and financial flows within the YG to show how the results of policy implementation are dependent on all of them. The analyses reveal the implications of the YG for adult education and policy development. They outline that the implementation of the YG demonstrates the strong connection between initial education, employment and adult education and the importance of networking between different policy actors. The chapter concludes that economic concerns and encouraging people’s active participation in economic life are the focus of national adult education policy.