What does it finance?
The programme's objective is pursued through three “Key Actions”:
- Key Action 1: Learning mobility of individuals;
- Key Action 2: Cooperation among organisations and institutions;
- Key Action 3: Support to policy development and cooperation.
For the civil protection and disaster management community, Erasmus+ provides a unique opportunity to train, exchange knowledge, and prepare future generations of responders through mobility and cooperation projects through Key Action 1 and Key Action 2.
Examples of areas of support relevant for disaster risk management and preparedness include the following:
Key Action 1 – Learning Mobility of Individuals
It supports individuals spending learning periods abroad in a hosting institution.
Mobility of learners and staff: Opportunities for pupils, students, adult learners, trainees and young people, as well as for professors, teachers, trainers, educators, youth workers, sport staff, staff of education institutions and civil society organisations to undertake a learning and/or professional experience in another country.
Youth participation activities: Youth-led local and transnational initiatives run by informal groups of young people and/or youth organisations to help young people engage and learn to participate in democratic life, raising awareness about European Union common values and fundamental rights, bringing together young people and decision makers at local, national and European level, as well as contributing to European Union common goals.
Vocational Education and Training (VET): Erasmus+ supports traineeships (work placements) for students enrolled in vocational education and training (VET). These opportunities are also open to company-based apprentices and to recent VET graduates. This action supports organisations providing vocational education and training, or with other roles in this field, that want to organise learning mobility activities for learners, apprentices, recent graduates, teachers, trainers and other staff.
Projects are led by the applicant organisation, such as a VET provider, that sends participants to a hosting organisation abroad, such as a company for a traineeship. Learners and staff are then involved through their organisation’s project.
This action has two important goals: to benefit individual participants going abroad and to help develop educational institutions, raise their capacity for cross border cooperation and improve teaching and learning for everyone, not only for those who travel.
Key Action 2: Cooperation among organisations and institutions
It supports the development of organisations through the exchange of good practices and the creation of networks. Partnerships are always made up of organisations from different countries and led by a coordinator organisation, which submits the application on behalf of the project.
All funded projects are linked to one or several broad EU priorities. In addition, the project partners decide on more specific objectives based on their common interests and expertise. The project goals will often include capacity building through the development of innovative tools and ways of working, the exchange of good practices. There are two types of partnerships:
- Small-scale Partnerships are a simpler cooperation format, ideal for grassroots organisations and newcomers to Erasmus+. Partnerships are composed of at least two organisations from different countries and can last between six months and two years.
- Cooperation Partnerships are the most common partnership format. They can be set up by at least three organisations from different countries, for a duration of one to three years.