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Crossing Borders, Connecting Research: YOUROPE’s Transnational Conversations in Action

21 May 2026

One of the most distinctive features of the YOUROPE project is not what happens within a single country — it is what happens when young researchers from different countries begin to talk to each other.

Through Work Package 4, YOUROPE has been facilitating a series of transnational conversations that bring CLRA groups from across the consortium into direct dialogue. The second of these sessions took place on 21 May 2026, with further exchanges planned as the project moves into its final phase. Together, these conversations are creating something that no individual partner could build alone: a genuinely European network of youth-led research, connected by shared questions and mutual recognition.

Research that travels

These cross-border exchanges do more than build relationships — they strengthen the research itself. When young people see their findings reflected and extended in the work of peers in different countries, the local becomes legible as part of something European. A young researcher in Poland investigating why peers feel invisible in their city discovers that a counterpart in the Czech Republic has been asking remarkably similar questions about urban belonging. A group in Finland working on youth participation finds resonance with colleagues in Germany grappling with democracy education.

Individual investigations become part of a collective mapping of what it means to be young in Europe today — and the patterns that emerge across borders carry a weight that no single national study can produce.

A model for meaningful collaboration

The transnational conversations also demonstrate something important: that meaningful European collaboration does not require institutional hierarchy or formal structures. It requires curiosity, genuine exchange, and the willingness to take each other seriously. The CLRA-COIL framework being developed across YOUROPE — connecting Community-Led Research with Collaborative Online International Learning — is designed to sustain these connections beyond any individual session.

As the project moves towards its conclusion, the transnational conversations will play an increasingly important role in helping young researchers understand the European significance of their locally-grounded work. Their research is not just about their city, their school, or their community. It is part of a larger story about what inclusive European democracy can look like when young people lead the way.