In these times when global warming, the scandalous and revolting level of poverty of the populations of many countries of the South, which have been beating growth records (figures above 10%) for years, are throwing thousands of young people (girls and boys, graduates and less educated, unemployed and underemployed, etc.) on the roads of political exile or economic migration, often with the arrival of slavery in Libya, if not death by drowning in the Mediterranean or the anomaly of the South. In the DRC, the boom and the longevity of the social phenomenon of unemployed graduates are exclusively due to the lack of political will necessary to prepare ESU students for their rapid autonomy upon graduation. Taking into account and adapting to Congolese realities the good practices that have proven successful elsewhere could well constitute viable solutions.