⚡ Key Takeaways

The ILO’s Tawdif project set up Career Centres and Entrepreneurship Houses inside Algerian universities and trained hundreds of graduates through Job Search Clubs. Tawdif II, financed by the United Kingdom, consolidated the tools and contributed to a national digital career-orientation platform via partners including ANEM, ANADE, UGTA, and CGEA.

Bottom Line: Algerian universities, ministries, and employer federations should build new graduate-employment programs on top of Tawdif’s existing Career Centre, Entrepreneurship House, and Job Search Club architecture rather than reinventing it.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for AlgeriaHigh
Tawdif’s Career Centres and Entrepreneurship Houses sit inside the exact institutions — universities and ministries — that need to scale graduate-to-employer bridges for Algeria’s 2030 digital-jobs targets.
Action Timeline6-12 months
Domestic programs can plug into the existing institutional scaffolding within one academic cycle.
Key StakeholdersMinistry of Higher Education, Ministry of Labor, ANEM, ANADE (ex-ANSEJ), university career services
Decision TypeStrategic
This is a model-level decision about how Algeria structures the graduate-to-first-job transition, not a single initiative to launch.
Priority LevelHigh
Without institutional coaching infrastructure, even well-funded training programs produce certificates that don’t convert into employment.

Quick Take: Algerian universities, ministries, and employer federations should treat Tawdif’s Career Centres, Entrepreneurship Houses, and Job Search Clubs as the default architecture for any new graduate-employment initiative — and fund them from domestic budgets rather than waiting for another donor cycle.

The Project Algerian Universities Are Quietly Still Using

Most coverage of graduate employment in Algeria focuses on the macro mismatch: universities produce thousands of diplômés, the private sector struggles to find hires with the right skills, and the gap widens. Less visible is the infrastructure that international partners have been building inside Algerian universities to close that gap. The ILO’s Tawdif project — Arabic for “recruitment” — is the most durable example.

According to the ILO’s Tawdif project page, Tawdif’s general objective is to improve employment prospects for university graduates and facilitate the transition from classroom to job market. The project organized its work around three axes: strengthening student skills in job-search and entrepreneurship, better aligning training with labor-market needs, and building the capacity of the public institutions that accompany young graduates.

Career Centres and Entrepreneurship Houses

Two physical structures anchor the Tawdif model inside participating universities. Career Centres host career counselors, CV workshops, mock interviews, and employer outreach sessions. Entrepreneurship Houses (maisons de l’entrepreneuriat) provide coaching for students who want to launch their own business rather than hunt for salaried jobs.

These are not symbolic rooms. The ILO’s model was to staff them with trained personnel and connect them to a national network of tools, assessment instruments, and partner institutions. Students who walked into a Tawdif-enabled Career Centre got access to structured programs rather than a leaflet and a handshake.

Job Search Clubs: The Most Scaled Component

Within the Career Centres, the signature Tawdif innovation was the Job Search Club — a group format where a cohort of recent graduates spends several weeks together mastering modern job-search methods: targeted CV writing, hidden-job-market research, networking outreach, interview techniques, and negotiation.

The ILO Algeria country page notes that “hundreds of young graduates” went through these clubs during Tawdif’s first phase. The clubs also doubled as informal cohorts where participants helped each other find openings — an unusual dynamic in Algeria’s traditionally individualist job-search culture.

When the first Tawdif project ended in 2019, the ILO expanded the Job Search Club network rather than shutting it down, training ministerial staff to operate additional clubs inside public-employment structures.

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Tawdif II: Building on What Worked

The follow-up phase — TAWDIF II: Building Skills Together for Youth Employment — was implemented by the ILO Office in Algiers (which covers Algeria, Libya, Morocco, Mauritania, and Tunisia) and financed by the United Kingdom. Tawdif II shifted emphasis from opening new physical centers to consolidating the tools, curricula, and institutional partnerships the first phase had established.

One concrete output was the “Understanding the Enterprise” (Comprendre l’entreprise) intersectoral orientation tool, developed with ministerial staff and rolled out to partner structures. The idea is simple: before universities can align their curricula with employer needs, there has to be a common language for describing what enterprises actually do, what skills they hire for, and how roles evolve.

Institutional Plumbing

The partner list matters more than the project name. Tawdif and Tawdif II worked with:

  • Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research — for university-level implementation
  • Ministry of Labor, Employment and Social Security — for connection to public employment services
  • ANEM (Agence Nationale de l’Emploi) — the national employment agency
  • ANSEJ (now ANADE) — the agency supporting young entrepreneurs
  • UGTA (workers’ union) and CGEA (employers’ confederation) — for social-partner buy-in

This cross-ministry architecture is what separates Tawdif from shorter-lived NGO programs. A Career Centre embedded in a university is only useful if it can refer students to real employers, real funding programs, and real labor-market data. Tawdif plugged those connections in.

The Digital Orientation Platform

After the initial phases, the ILO contributed to setting up a digital career-orientation platform for young people — an evolution of the face-to-face Career Centre model for a population of graduates that increasingly searches and applies online. The platform builds on the methodologies (CV templates, interview prep modules, company research frameworks) developed during Tawdif and makes them accessible beyond the handful of physical Centres.

Why It Still Matters in 2026

The labor-market numbers that drove Tawdif haven’t disappeared. Algerian universities still graduate large cohorts each year in fields where private-sector demand is uneven, and employers still report difficulty finding graduates with practical readiness for their first job. What has changed is that the institutional scaffolding Tawdif built — Career Centres, Entrepreneurship Houses, Job Search Clubs, trained ministerial staff, and a digital platform — is now available for domestic programs to extend, localize, and fund at scale.

For the new generation of Algerian digital-skills initiatives — the 40 digital training programs announced in 2025, the 285,000 vocational-training places, the 74 AI master’s programs — Tawdif’s legacy offers a practical template. The gap between a training certificate and a first job is not closed by more certificates. It’s closed by the coaching infrastructure that Tawdif demonstrated, however imperfectly, that Algerian universities can host.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ILO Tawdif project and when did it run?

Tawdif (“recruitment” in Arabic) is an ILO-led project to improve university-to-job-market transition for Algerian graduates. The first phase ran until 2019. Tawdif II, financed by the United Kingdom, followed and is implemented by the ILO Office in Algiers.

What’s the difference between a Career Centre and an Entrepreneurship House?

Career Centres help graduates prepare for salaried employment — CV workshops, interviews, networking, Job Search Clubs. Entrepreneurship Houses (maisons de l’entrepreneuriat) coach students who want to launch their own business. Both are embedded inside partner universities.

Which Algerian institutions partner with Tawdif?

The project works with the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, the Ministry of Labor, ANEM (national employment agency), ANSEJ/ANADE (youth entrepreneurship support), UGTA (workers’ union), and CGEA (employers’ confederation).

Sources & Further Reading