European Youth Parliament - Ireland


European Youth Parliament Ireland is a politically unaffiliated, nonprofit organization that encourages Irish youth to be actively engaged in political discourse. It operates across the Republic of Ireland, with Northern Ireland being under the responsibility of EYP UK. EYP Ireland represents one of the 40 National Committees of EYP International.

History

The European Youth Parliament was founded by Bettina Carr-Allinson as a school project at the Lycée François-Ier in Fontainebleau. From 2001 to 2004 the EYP encountered various financial problems and did not meet. However, on November 4, 2004, it was reborn due an agreement between the EYP's Board of National Committees, EYP alumni and the Heinz-Schwarzkopf Foundation. The politically impartial Heinz-Schwarzkopf Foundation Young Europe was founded in 1971 in Hamburg. The foundation's name was changed to the Schwarzkopf Foundation Young Europe. Since then the EYP has been overseen and supported by the Schwarzkopf-Stiftung Junges Europa and is hosted in Berlin, Germany.
In Ireland, the first national session was held in 1997. Due to the organizational structure, it was only open to students in County Dublin. It was opened up to non-Dublin students in 2000. Since then, it has gradually increased in participation. Four regional sessions are hosted every year.

Sessions

Regional Sessions

Four regional sessions are operated across the nation throughout the year. The Munster Session takes place with participants from the province of Munster; the Leinster Session takes place with participants from the province of Leinster ; the Dublin Session takes place with participants from the counties of Fingal, South Dublin, Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown, and the city of Dublin; and the Connacht-Ulster Session takes place with participants from the province of Connacht and the three counties of Donegal, Cavan, and Monaghan. The six counties in Northern Ireland have their own regional session under the auspices of EYP United Kingdom.
Each regional session is held in varying location across the province. Locations may differ from year to year. For instance, the Connaught-Ulster Regional Session took place in Cavan in 2018, and Galway in 2019.
Each of these sessions take place over the course of ‘a full weekend’. The first day is dedicated to team building, in which participants get acquainted with those in their committee. The second day is where the majority of the work occurs, and a resolution is agreed upon. During the third day, the General Assembly takes place, where different committees debate and vote upon their resolutions.

National Sessions

A number of students selected from each regional session then participate in the national session. Each national session takes place in a different location around the country. The national session operates similarly to the regional sessions, but over the course of four days; two days are dedicated to creating the resolution instead of one. Students are then selected from the National Round to take part in an international round, somewhere throughout Europe.

National Session Locations

National SessionLocationTheme
1999Dublin City
2006Dublin City
2007Dublin City
2010Dublin City
2011Dublin City
2012Dublin City
2013Dublin City'2039 - Building the Europe of Tomorrow'
2014Portlaoise, Laois‘21st Century Europe : Forging Global Friendships’
2015Dublin City
2016Cork City‘Remembering Our Country’s Past, Imagining Europe’s Future’
2017CIT, Cork City‘Informed Europe; Growth through Understanding'
2018Mahon, Cork‘Exploring Young European Potential’
2019Galway City
2020Cavan
2021Cork City-

Format

Committees

Participants are divided into committees, which are each given a topic of discussion. The committees are based on European Parliament committees. There may be two groups of the same committee; both have different topics, and are differentiated by number.
First the committee creates a list of problems regarding their topic, followed by a list of possible solutions to the problems. When creating solutions, committees are not allowed to violate the powers of the European Union. For instance, committees cannot declare money must be spent on fixing a problem, only recommend it.
Not all committees are present at every session. It is at the whims of the organizers, who usually select topics to go with the theme of the event.
Each committee is given a topic to base their resolution on. Rather than being given a broad topic, each committee is instead given a statement. For instance, a topic for the Committee on Foreign Affairs may be ”How can the programmes and institutions run by the North-South Ministerial Council between Ireland and Northern Ireland and underpinned by EU law be best protected from the financial, political and practical fallout of Brexit?”
Due to the many of the topics being uncommon, explanatory guides are given to participants prior to the beginning of the session, to give enough time for individual research.

List of Committees

AbbreviationCommittee name
AFETCommittee on Foreign Affairs
AFCOCommittee on Constitutional Affairs
BCAACommittee on Progress
SEDECommittee on Security and Defense
ENVICommittee on Environment, Public Health, and Food Safety
ITRECommittee on Industry, Trade, and Research
JURICommittee on Legal Affairs
LIBECommittee on Civil Liberties, Justice, and Home Affairs
ECONCommittee on Economic and Monetary Affairs
AGRICommittee on Agriculture and Rural Development
EMPLCommittee on Employment and Social Affairs
FEMMCommittee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality
BNLCommittee on Baller and BM Affairs
DROICommittee on Human Rights
CULTCommittee on Culture and Education
PECHCommittee on Fishing
INTACommittee on International Trade
IMCOCommittee on Internal Markets and Consumer Protection
EMPLCommittee on Employment and Social Affairs
DEVECommittee on Development
CLIMCommittee on Climate Change
TRANCommittee on Transportation and Tourism

Event Structure

The first day is usually dedicated to ice breakers in order to familiarize committee members with each other. Several games are done with the purpose of getting participants acquainted with speaking up and compromise. One, a variant of the Alligator River Story is played with the intent of getting people to compromise on a situation in which everyone will have differing moral viewpoints.
On the second day, the session will be formally declared at the opening ceremony. The European Anthem is played. A guest speaker addresses the speakers - previous guest speakers have included Senator Fintan Warfield and Minister for European Affairs Lucinda Creighton. Each committee will then discuss their topic, and create a resolution. During the national session, this takes place over two days. During the evenings of the second day, social events are held, such as a disco, table quiz, or speaking events.
The final day plays host to the General Assembly, in which each committee in turn presents their completed resolution. Other committees then have the opportunity to debate the resolution, offering points of support, criticism toward the resolution. When all debate has finished, all students then have the opportunity to vote on the proposed resolution.

Structure of the General Assembly

The members of EYP Ireland are elected every Spring at the AGM. Positions include President, Treasurer, Conference Head Organiser-Coordinator, International Officer, Alumni Officer, Public Relations and Fundraising Officer, Graphic and Webmaster & Web Design Officer and Events Officer.
In addition, each provincial equivalent has a regional committee that runs various local EYP and social events throughout the year.

International Sessions

History

Ireland has hosted international sessions in 1995, 2003, 2007, and 2016.
Ireland hosted one of three international sessions in 2003. It was opened by President Mary McAleese. The session took place in Dublin Castle. In 2016, Ireland hosted the international session along with Belfast, in Northern Ireland. It was the first such International Session hosted between two nations, and was designed to highlight the lasting peace between North and South.

International Session Locations

YearHost CityHost City
1995Dublin City-
2003Dublin City-
2007Dublin City-
2016Dublin CityBelfast City, UK