Westminster Media Forum

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Next steps for the National Youth Strategy

implementation & delivery | youth voice & co-production | workforce development | enrichment & extracurricular provision | inactivity & NEET support | funding & long-term investment

TO BE PUBLISHED March 2026


Starting from: £99 + VAT
Format: DOWNLOADABLE PDF


This conference will examine the recently published National Youth Strategy, which sets out proposals to improve youth services with £500m committed in government funding. It will focus on practical considerations, and the way forward for empowering young people in decisions about policy that will affect their future, enhancing their access to opportunities, and improving their safety and wellbeing.


Sessions in the agenda assess the strategy, looking at issues for implementation, as well as best practice and the roles of key stakeholders, development of the youth sector, and provision of extracurricular activities and support for young people to progress into further study and employment.


Investment & delivery
Areas for discussion include priorities for long‑term investment in coordinated youth work and services, and alignment with wider policy objectives for skills and employment, social mobility, health and wellbeing, and safer communities. Frameworks for co‑delivery with young people put forward in the strategy will also be assessed, as well as establishing clarity on roles and responsibilities within government, local authorities, charities, and wider society. Discussion will consider priorities for delivering new duties and options for developing long-term funding solutions.


Attendees will consider priorities for the establishment of 50 Young Futures Hubs, alongside the refurbishment and creation of up to 250 youth centres by 2029, looking at the potential impact of youth services on young people’s access to employment opportunities, careers guidance and wellbeing support.


Options for addressing regional disparities and effective resource allocation will be discussed, as well as the potential impact of the Richer Young Lives fund and Better Youth Spaces programme on access to youth spaces and services. Discussion will also consider priorities for improving data collection and sharing across services, with the Government committing £5m for digital infrastructure.


With a National Youth Agency paper published earlier this year calling on national and local government to embed youth work in core policy and funding decisions, delegates will consider best practice examples of designing and implementing effective place-based youth work that reflects the diverse needs of communities. 


Delegates will also consider how investment can best be targeted, including the £820m for the Youth Guarantee Scheme announced in the 2025 Autumn Budget, as well as ensuring equitable access across the regions.


Supporting co-production with young people & the youth work profession
Attendees will consider priorities for the work of the Youth Advisory Group in bearing the voice of young people and their lived experience on development of the strategy, as well as in delivery, including supporting the shift in decision-making away from a one-size-fits-all approach to serve the needs of individuals and communities.


Strategic priorities for developing the youth work profession and their skills will also be assessed. Delegates will assess options for investment in regional projects and improving the capability of youth work teams. New approaches to addressing challenges faced in training and recruitment will be examined, as well as priorities for retaining skilled practitioners alongside creating new professional routes, considering how to ensure that youth work is recognised as a valued career and that services are equipped to ensure sustainable delivery of the Strategy.


Curriculum enrichment, extracurricular activities & equitable inclusion
Further sessions will focus on how the strategy might align with wider policy objectives on education, skills, physical and mental health, and community development.


With the Prime Minister announcing £88m of funding to support youth clubs and enable schools to offer more extracurricular activities, delegates will assess strategies for improving equitable access to opportunity. Support needed to tackle regional disparities in the delivery of extracurricular provision will be assessed, alongside next steps for rollout of the new core enrichment offer committed to by government in their recent response to Curriculum and Assessment Review, which recommended that every school and college should be aiming to provide beyond the mandated curriculum.


It will be an opportunity to discuss best practice for schools and colleges in embedding enrichment and improving participation, strategic approaches to partnerships with national organisations, private providers, and employers, as well as meeting the funding and infrastructure needs of institutions to ensure equal access.


Tackling youth inactivity & supporting careers and progression
With the Independent Report into Young People and Work - commissioned by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and led by former Health Secretary Alan Milburn - expected to report in summer 2026, delegates will also assess how delivery of the strategy and wider policy initiatives, such as the commitment to provide 350,000 workplace opportunities, can support youth progression into employment and future study, as well as tackling the drivers of inactivity. Discussion will consider strategies for developing coordinated interventions to address the rise in young people not in education, employment or training, including developing effective multi-agency working to improve outcomes where mental health, social disadvantage, and caring responsibilities prevent engagement.


Areas for discussion include tailored support to this group through coordinated interventions, including examining the drivers behind the rise in NEET young people, and options for taking forward measures set out in the Government’s Post-16 Education and Skills White Paper in addressing this, such as through earlier and more personalised careers guidance and clear progression routes.


The rollout of existing related initiatives will also be assessed, such as the expansion of Creative Futures dedicated to unlocking creative careers for young people, and those announced in the Building Creative Futures package. This includes early indications from the Local Youth Transformation Pilot on improving local authority capabilities to meet their statutory duty to deliver effective youth services, and from Phase 1 of the Better Youth Spaces programme. Delegates will consider strategies for reducing administrative burdens for local authorities, expanding capacity, and potential options for monitoring outcomes and impact.


All delegates will be able to contribute to the output of the conference, which will be shared with parliamentary, ministerial, departmental and regulatory offices, and more widely. This includes the full proceedings and additional articles submitted by delegates. As well as key stakeholders, those already due to attend include officials from the Department for Education; Department for Business and Trade; Department for Work and Pensions; Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government; Department for the Economy, NI; Office for National Statistics; Intellectual Property Office; and Ofsted.



This on-demand pack includes

  • A full video recording of the conference as it took place, with all presentations, Q&A sessions, and remarks from chairs
  • An automated transcript of the conference
  • Copies of the slides used to accompany speaker presentations (subject to permission
  • Access to on-the-day materials, including speaker biographies, attendee lists and the agenda