Analysis

Levelling Up: the key proposals for children and young people

6 mins read Children's Services
Flagship policy paper sets out plans to boost education outcomes for pupils in disadvantaged communities and invest in youth training, but children’s services leaders criticise lack of measures on child poverty.
Plans in the Levelling Up white paper include the creation of 55 education investment areas in England where school outcomes are weakest. Picture: Monkey Business/Adobe Stock
Plans in the Levelling Up white paper include the creation of 55 education investment areas in England where school outcomes are weakest. Picture: Monkey Business/Adobe Stock

The government’s Levelling Up white paper lays out 12 “missions” to align prosperity and opportunities in the UK’s poorest areas to those in the richest.

The paper, published in February by Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove, sets out plans for 55 education investment areas (EIAs) to boost outcomes for children in the most disadvantaged areas and reiterates commitments to increase access to youth services for all young people alongside the offer of a “London-style” devolution deal for local authorities.

However, critics say it is a “missed opportunity” to invest in services for children and young people.

Children’s sector leaders point out that support for early years providers and measures to tackle child poverty are missing altogether.

Register Now to Continue Reading

Thank you for visiting Children & Young People Now and making use of our archive of more than 60,000 expert features, topics hubs, case studies and policy updates. Why not register today and enjoy the following great benefits:

What's Included

  • Free access to 4 subscriber-only articles per month

  • Email newsletter providing advice and guidance across the sector

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here


More like this