Dear Members and Friends of the Liaison Group,
It is my pleasure to address you all at the start of the International
Volunteer Year 2026 (IVY2026). At CEV we always recognise and honour all those volunteers, organisations,
and communities, who uphold humanity, solidarity, and peace, often while facing
immense hardship and uncertainty. In IVY2026, in partnership with all of you,
we look forward to giving this even more special prominence and attention.
We know that in the EU we have many existing challenges, from the
climate crisis and demographic change to misinformation, democratic
backsliding, and natural hazards. All of this requires even stronger, more
coordinated efforts to build community resilience. Volunteers are key actors in
these efforts enhancing the ability of communities to respond to crises in
informed and collective ways that open pathways for deeper collaboration
between public authorities, civil society, and the private for-profit sector.
The increase in
polarisation, the breakdown of democratic processes, fundamental rights and the
rule of law are being exacerbated by foreign interference. Volunteers play a
huge role, and with the right resources and coordinated strategy, could
play an even bigger one, in combatting these anti-democratic trends including
in the digital and media spheres. The 2026 EESC Civil Society
Week is around the corner and will give us the opportunity to explore this
issue as well as the potential offered by the European Democracy Shield to
address these negative trends. Highlighting the essential role of education in
protecting our democracy and the role of civil society and other actors in
relation to that will also be an important component, as will addressing EU
housing strategies. Volunteering is a central component of the European Social
Contract and the social economy, having an immense value beyond task delivery.
Volunteers are essential for a thriving democracy giving a change-making
example to all. Their needs and concerns
need to be at the heart of the EU Civil Society strategy, that is another major
theme that will be addressed in Civil Society Week 2026.
IVY2026 aims to mobilise
government, civil society and the private for-profit sector to strengthen
recognition, safety, and enabling environments for volunteers worldwide. From a
European perspective, IVY2026 represents an important opportunity to further
develop this vision by embedding democratic and human rights principles that
are fundamental to the European understanding of volunteering into global
conversations. Reinforcing IVY2026 with this democratic, rights-based dimension
is essential to ensure that volunteer engagement contributes meaningfully to
human dignity, civic space, and peaceful coexistence and the outcomes from
CivSocWeek 2026 will make an important contribution to that.