Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCameron Harrison Modified over 9 years ago
1
Children’s rights-based participation in advocacy Professor Laura Lundy and Dr Chelsea Marshall Centre for Children’s Rights Queen’s University, Belfast www.qub.ac.uk/ccr
2
The Centre for Children’s Rights: Who we are and what we do Implementing Children’s Rights - using the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and other relevant international human rights standards to evaluate the laws, policies and practices which affect children. Research with Children - evaluating and using the best methods of conducting research into children’s lives with a particular focus on approaches which involve children actively in the process. Training and education on children’s rights – providing high quality training and education programmes at Masters and Doctoral level. We have a new Masters in Children’s Rights and are developing open access on-line training on the UNCRC.
3
Overview Why do we need to involve children and young people in advocacy? What are the key features of child rights-based participation as they relate to advocacy? A good example of children participating in advocacy. What matters to children and young people themselves?
4
Why should children and young people be involved in advocacy for their rights?
5
It is core to a ‘rights-based’ approach Activity should further the realisation of human/children’s rights Human/children’s rights standards should guide all phases of activity The activity should contribute to the development of the capacities of the duty-bearers to meet their obligations and of the rights-holders to claim their rights UN Statement of Common Understanding on a Human Rights-Based Approach (The Stamford Agreement)
6
They are entitled to be involved States Parties shall assure to the child who is capable of forming his or her own views the right to express those views freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of the child being given due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child (Article 12, UNCRC)
7
It supports the realisation of their other rights More relevant claims Better informed decisions Increased accountability of duty-bearers
8
The key features of children’s rights-based participation
9
UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, General Comment No. 12. (2009) Transparent and informative Voluntary Respectful Relevant Facilitated with child-friendly working methods. Inclusive Supported by training Safe and sensitive to risk. Accountable. (for advice on implementation see: Gerison Lansdown (2011), The Child’s Right to be Heard, UNICEF and Save the Children.
10
SPACE Safe and inclusive opportunity to form and express a view VOICE Facilitated to express views freely in medium of choice AUDIENCE The view must be listened to INFLUENCE The view must be acted upon The right to express views The right to have views given due weight ARTICLE 12 Voice is not enough… Lundy (2007)
11
A good example of children’s rights-based advocacy
12
Advancing Children’s Rights 2013/2014 Project funded by Atlantic Philanthropies Collaboration between the Centre for Children’s Rights at Queen’s University, Belfast and Child Law Clinic, University College Cork Capturing the learning in relation to children’s rights advocacy of 18 organisations working in Ireland, North and South through interviews with Directors, Staff and children and young people involved in advocacy. Further information available on www.advancingchildrensrights.com www.advancingchildrensrights.com
13
Children and Youth Led Advocacy on the adequacy of school counselling services Young people from Children’s Law Centre, (NI) Child-led topic: Chose the issue that they wanted to work on. Peer research: survey with over 1000 young people. Child-friendly dissemination: presented the findings in drama and a child-friendly written report Engaged directly with duty-bearers: direct dialogue with the Head of Service and Minister for Education.
14
What matters to children and young people themselves in terms of their participation in advocacy?
15
Group Session 1: Advocacy with children who do not communicate in ‘typical’ ways. Children with physical disabilities Children who speak a minority language Children with learning disabilities Children who are averse to social interaction The very young Others?
16
Children with learning difficulties Ask children themselves about their preferred way of communicating. If this isn’t possible, take advice from those who know best- their teachers, parents or carers.
17
The ‘banana’ bus “We are embarrassed on that bus… We hide under the seats”
18
The very young The Committee on the Rights of the Child has observed that younger children: ‘make choices and communicate their feelings, ideas and wishes in numerous ways, long before they are able to communicate through the conventions of spoken or written language’ GC7, 2005, para. 11
19
Group work: session 1. In small groups, imagine that you have been asked to consult with children aged 4-5, in socially disadvantaged areas You want to find out what things they find hard in the first year of kindergarten in order to advocate for an after-school programme which helps them settle into school. Note: these children cannot read; most cannot count; and not all will want to draw pictures. Resources are unlimited.
20
Taking advice from children. Children’s advisory groups are one way of involving children in all stages of the process. In a project for Barnardo’s NI, we worked with an advisory group of four children aged 4-5 who advised at all stages: Questions to be asked. Methods to be used. Interpretation of findings. Dissemination of results.
21
Choosing the items for the picture survey
22
Engagement in the choice of methods The CRAG suggested that “circle time” would be a good way of finding out other children’s views. Their choice counteracted some of the recognised disadvantages of group interviews
23
Engagement in the interpretation of the data
24
Engagement in dissemination
25
Group work: session 2. Scaling up: How to involve larger numbers of children and young people.
26
Why? More inclusive More persuasive
27
How? Public campaigns Surveys Social media How can children lead or be meaningfully involved in these?
28
Child-led campaigns
29
Surveys Advantage: Most obvious to include greater numbers and be able to generalise. Disadvantage: often needs technical expertise in question- writing and analysis that can be outside the capacity of staff and children. Worth checking out free on-line questionnaires such as Survey Monkey. May be off-putting for children to do … but the way to try and address this obvious…
30
Involving children in survey design
31
Providing space to express views freely
32
Encouraging fuller responses Participant responses in ‘free response’ boxes were noticeably more extensive and detailed: participants wrote an average of 15 words in their responses compared to an average of 6.4 words when other children’s views not provided. ‘ i would assess science by doing a project and getting marks on that and maybe have a small test after. The project could be like a rivision thing but better and funner’. ‘I would let the children bring their own experiments into the classroom and explain how to do them. I would encourage them to research new ideas to make it enjoyable and interesting’ ‘I would ask the class how they would like to do it’
33
Social media
34
Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiHp4Zlb9 mg
35
Thunderclap via Twitter What was one of the most successful Twitter campaigns in 2013? … beating Dove Natural Beauty?!
36
UNICEF INDIA The #AWAAZDO hashtag received 1,525 mentions and the @UNICEFIndia Twitter account gained over 2000 followers. The campaign itself also received 60,540 impressions on Twitter, as it was calculated using Tweetreach. By the end of the campaign, the Awaaz Do website also got 203,248 signups of people interested in joining a good cause.
37
Group-work activity 2. Good Fast Cheap Choose TWO!
38
Reducing the voting age to 16 – involving as many children as you can. Group 1. Good and fast and not cheap. There is a 12 week consultation period on proposed legislation. Budget is not an issue. Group 2. Good and cheap but slow. There is no proposal to do this in government but the young people you work with want to work on this issue. You have very little money but time is not an issue. Group 3. Good and fast and cheap. Like group 1 –except you have no money! Group 4. Cheap, fast and not good. Like group 3 except bad.
39
Session 3. Including marginalised children Who are they in your communities? Who works with and for them? Do they have “consultation fatigue?” What can be done to support their right to participate?
40
Session 4: Having impact What are the best ways of ensuring that duty- bearers take children’s views seriously and act upon them?
41
Getting an upfront commitment 41
42
Face to Face contact In the past year for example I can think of conversations I’ve had with children and young people and they weren’t like [consultation events]. They were proper business meetings where we sat down and talked very seriously about their situations and in those meetings I got to hear probably some of the most salient pieces of information about policy- making that I needed to... (Government representative) … to have the Education Minister there as well was brilliant and to get his immediate feedback – just the presentation and then he was on the spot... (Young person)
43
Group activity 4 Share some examples of practices that you think were effective or ineffective in ensuring that duty-bearers responded to children’s rights advocacy. What makes duty-bearers not just listen but act?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.