Today, there are close to 150 000 young people who are not in employment, education or training in Sweden, according to the MUCF report A long-term exclusion (2020). One in ten young people in Sweden is at some point in their youth outside both work and studies according to MUCF. For some of them, this is a temporary situation. For others, it is something that lasts a long period and risks leading to continued exclusion. About a third of the young people in the uvas group are not found in any national register data, and it is therefore not possible to find out what they are doing. Research shows that the longer an individual stays in exclusion, the greater the risk of being trapped in it. The reasons why an individual is excluded are often multiple and complex. Mental illness or disability are the main risk factors for never having a job or studying during their youth. Young foreign-born women are another group at risk of falling into the uvas group. Expected results for the project are that 710 young Malmö residents from the uvas group are enrolled in the project and that 80% of these are enrolled at Ung Malmö where they are offered efforts to strengthen their position in the labour market and to transition to work or education. The project aims to reach 40% women and 60% men. Expected effects of the project are that unemployment and exclusion among young people will decrease and that the group uvas in Malmö will decrease. The project will work with various forms of direct and indirect search as well as a shorter mapping period when enrolling in the project prior to admission to Ung Malmö. The project will also create collaboration with other actors who come into contact with the target group and work actively with communication out to the target group, relatives of the target group and collaboration partners. The outreach work is about reaching the young people who today are in an exclusion to break this. It is primarily the groups most affected by structural barriers in society that the project wants to reach through direct and indirect search. It is important to increase access to interventions for young people who, for various reasons, have not seen these opportunities. The longer an individual is out of employment, the greater the risk of inaction. This is not only a benefit to the individual but also to society.