a continue to attach special importance to youth problems, and particularly to the question of group participation by young people, and invite the governments of member states to give youth organisations financial aid at international, national, regional and local levels ;
b ask the governments of those member states which have not yet lowered the voting age below 21 to do so and to consider the advisability of lowering the age at which a person may stand for election, on the basis of thorough research and in the light of recent experience ;
c promote school and education systems designed to prepare young people to take part in decision-making from an early age ;
d take into account, in the drawing-up of the medium-term plan for 1976-80, the necessity for an extension of co-operation with youth organisations, and make available the funds required for the realisation of the programme on youth participation, prepared by the CCC ;
e lay down principles and make arrangements for group participation by young people, possibly in the form of a "European Youth Participation Charter", and see that the said principles and arrangements favour the youth organisations with the most democratic decision-making structures ;
f instruct the CCC to work in close cooperation with the Assembly and the European Youth Centre where its activities connected with youth participation are concerned ;
g increase the means available to the European Youth Centre to ensure an extension of the premises, equipment and personnel necessary for the development of activities already in hand, but also to allow the future development of meetings involving research workers, governmental decision-makers and representatives of youth organisations, which are envisaged in the present CCC programme ;
h recognise the importance of the European Youth Foundation, by deciding upon its continuation for an indeterminate period and by substantially increasing its present endowment ;
i attach special importance to making it easier for young people to express their views, which is vital if they are to be better understood by the adult world, and ask governments of member states to give financial assistance to "information centres" for youth, to be managed by young people themselves ;
j extend the co-operation with youth organisations that already exists thanks to the EYC to other sectors of activity of the Council of Europe, thus putting into practice in the organisation itself the principles and ideas it wishes to promote.