The Children's Rights Movement is a historical and modern movement committed to the acknowledgment, expansion, and/or regression of the rights of children
around the world. It began in the early part of the last century and
has been an effort by government organizations, advocacy groups,
academics, lawyers, lawmakers, and judges to construct a system of laws
and policies that enhance and protect the lives of children. While the historical definition of child has varied, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child asserts that "A child is any human being below the age of eighteen years, unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier." There are no definitions of other terms used to describe young people such as "adolescents", "teenagers" or "youth" in international law.
Now that child labor had been effectively eradicated in parts of the world, the movement turned to other things, but it again stalled when World War II broke out and children and women began to enter the work force once more. With millions of adults at war, the children were needed to help keep the country running. In Europe, children served as couriers, intelligence collectors, and other underground resistance workers in opposition to Hitler's regime.
Now that child labor had been effectively eradicated in parts of the world, the movement turned to other things, but it again stalled when World War II broke out and children and women began to enter the work force once more. With millions of adults at war, the children were needed to help keep the country running. In Europe, children served as couriers, intelligence collectors, and other underground resistance workers in opposition to Hitler's regime.
History
Natural rights
The concept of children having particular rights is a relatively new
one. Traditional attitudes towards children tended to consider them as
mere extensions of the household and 'owned' by their parents and/or
legal guardian, who exerted absolute parental control.
Views began to change during the Enlightenment, when tradition was increasingly challenged and the value of individual autonomy and natural rights began to be asserted.
The Foundling Hospital in London was founded in 1741 as a children's home for the "education and maintenance of exposed and deserted young children". Thomas Spence, an English political radical wrote the first modern defence of the natural rights of children in The Rights of Infants, published in 1796.
Social reform
With the onset of the Industrial Revolution, children as young as six began to be employed in the factories and coal mines
in often inhumane conditions with long hours and little pay. During the
early 19th century this exploitation began to attract growing
opposition. The terrible conditions of the poor urban children was
exposed to liberal middle-class opinion, notably by the author Charles Dickens in his novel Oliver Twist. Social reformers, such as the Lord Shaftesbury, began to mount a vigorous campaign against this practice.
Ameliorating legislation was achieved with a series of Factory Acts
passed during the 19th century, where working hours for children were
limited and they were no longer permitted to work during the night. Children younger than nine were not allowed to work and those between 9-16 were limited to 16 hours per day.
Factories were also required to provide education to the apprentices in
reading, writing and arithmetic for the first four years.
An influential social reformer was Mary Carpenter, who campaigned on behalf of neglected children who had turned to juvenile delinquency.
In 1851 she proposed the establishment of three types of schools; free
day schools for the general population, industrial schools for those in
need and reformatory schools for young offenders. She was consulted by the drafters of educational bills, and she was invited to give evidence before House of Commons committees. In 1852 she established a reformatory school at Bristol.
In the United States, the Children's Rights Movement began with the orphan train.
In the big cities, when a child's parents died or were extremely poor,
the child frequently had to go to work to support himself and/or his
family. Boys generally became factory or coal workers, and girls became prostitutes or saloon girls, or else went to work in a sweat shop. All of these jobs paid only starvation wages.
In 1852, Massachusetts required children to attend school. In 1853, Charles Brace founded the Children's Aid Society,
which worked hard to take street children in. The following year, the
children were placed on a train headed for the West, where they were
adopted, and often given work. By 1929, the orphan train stopped running
altogether, but its principles lived on.
The National Child Labor Committee,
an organization dedicated to the abolition of all child labor, was
formed in the 1890s. It managed to pass one law, which was struck down
by the Supreme Court two years later for violating a child's right to
contract his work. In 1924, Congress attempted to pass a constitutional amendment that would authorize a national child labor law. This measure was blocked, and the bill was eventually dropped. It took the Great Depression
to end child labor nationwide; adults had become so desperate for jobs
that they would work for the same wage as children. In 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Fair Labor Standards Act which, amongst other things, placed limits on many forms of child labor.
The Polish educationalist Janusz Korczak wrote of the rights of children in his book How to Love a Child (Warsaw, 1919); a later book was entitled The Child's Right to Respect (Warsaw, 1929). In 1917, following the Russian Revolution, the Moscow branch of the organization Proletkult produced a Declaration of Children's Rights.
Rights of the Child
The first formal charter to set out the rights of children was drafted by British social reformer Eglantyne Jebb in 1923. Jebb founded Save the Children in 1919, one of the first charities aimed at the young, to help alleviate the starvation of children in Germany and Austria-Hungary during the Allied blockade of Germany in World War I which continued after the Armistice.
Her experiences there and later in Russia,
led her to believe that the rights of a child needed be especially
protected and enforced, and her stipulations consisted of the following
criteria:
- The child must be given the means requisite for its normal development, both materially and spiritually.
- The child that is hungry must be fed, the child that is sick must be nursed, the child that is backward must be helped, the delinquent child must be reclaimed, and the orphan and the waif must be sheltered and succored.
- The child must be the first to receive relief in times of distress.
- The child must be put in a position to earn a livelihood, and must be protected against every form of exploitation.
- The child must be brought up in the consciousness that its talents must be devoted to the service of its fellow men.
This manifesto was adopted by the International Save the Children Union and endorsed by the League of Nations General Assembly in 1924 as the World Child Welfare Charter.
In 1925, the first International Child Welfare Congress was held in
Geneva, where the Declaration was widely discussed and supported by
organisations and governments.
Declaration of the Rights of the Child
The SCIU
also pressed the newly formed United Nations in 1946 to adopt the World
Child Welfare Charter. This was achieved in 1959, when the United Nations General Assembly adopted an expanded version as the Declaration of the Rights of the Child. Its main provisions are:
- protection rights: the right to be protected against maltreatment and neglect, the right to be protected from all forms of exploitation
- provision rights: the right to food and to health care, the right to education, the right to benefit from social security
- participation rights: the right to act in certain circumstances and the right to be involved in decision-making
From the formation of the United Nations
to the present day, the Children's Rights Movement has become global in
focus. Children around the world still suffer from forced child labor, genital mutilation, military service, and sex trafficking. Several international organizations have rallied to the assistance of children. These include Save the Children, Free the Children, and the Children's Defense Fund.
The Child Rights Information Network, or CRIN, formed in 1983, is a group of 1,600 non-governmental organizations from around the world which advocate for the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Organizations report on their countries' progress towards
implementation, as do governments that have ratified the Convention.
Every 5 years reporting to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child is required for governments.
Children's rights by country
Many countries have created an institute of children's rights commissioner or ombudsman,
the first being Norway in 1981. Others include Finland, Sweden, and
Ukraine, which was the first country worldwide to install a child in
that post in 2005.
Argentina
In
2005, in order to implement the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child, national Law for the Integral Protection of Children and
Adolescents was enacted. This not only allows for protective measures
for children, but also created the groundwork for a juvenile justice
system. This system allows for children to be integrated back into
society and established tactics to protect children from abuse and
exploitation.
Australia
Australia
is a participant to all significant treaties that impact on children’s
rights. The rights and protection of children are governed by both
Federal and state and territory law.
Brazil
Brazil is
a founding member of the UN and a signatory of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which was adopted by General Assembly
resolution in 1948. The Universal Declaration of the Rights of the Child
emphasizes that motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care
and that children born out of wedlock are allowed the same social
protection. In 1990, Brazil approved the UN Convention on the Rights of
the Child and fully incorporated it onto Brazil’s positive law.
China
China has
ratified many international documents with regard to children’s rights
protection, including the 1989 Convention on Rights of the Child,
the Optional Protocol to the Convention on Rights of Child on the Sale
of Children, Child Prostitution, and Child Pornography 2000, the Worst Forms of Child Labor Convention 1999, and The Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption 1993.
France
France is
in cooperation with all the major treaties dealing with children
rights. It has in place several mechanisms to monitor the implementation
of the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child, in particular, an
ombudsman for children.
Germany
Germany
is in agreement with the global conventions that protect the rights of
the child. However, Germany prefers to interpret these according to the
principles of European agreements, specifically the European Human Rights Convention and also in accordance with German Constitutional guarantees.
Greece
Greece
has various laws and a number of measures and services to promote and
advance the rights of children. In 2002, the Greek Parliament adopted a
new law on human trafficking; in 2003 the juvenile system was reformed;
in 2006 an additional law was created to combat intra-family violence
which states a prohibition of corporal punishment of children.
United States
There is a long history of children's rights in the U.S.
Many children's rights advocates in the U.S. today advocate for a
smaller agenda than their international peers. According to the U.S, for
the purposes of the present Convention, a child means every human being
below the age of eighteen years unless under the law applicable to the
child, majority is attained earlier. Groups predominately focus on child abuse and neglect, child fatalities, foster care, youth aging out of foster care, preventing foster care placement, and adoption. A longstanding movement promoting youth rights in the United States has made substantial gains in the past. Refer to the Convention of the Rights of a Child.
United Kingdom
The Children's Rights Movement assert that it is the case that
children have rights which adults, states and government have a
responsibility to uphold. The UK maintains a position that UNCRC is not
legally enforceable and is hence 'aspirational' only - albeit a 2003 ECHR
ruling states: "The human rights of children and the standards to which
all governments must aspire in realizing these rights for all children
are set out in the Convention on the Rights of the Child." (Extract from
Sahin v Germany, Grand Chamber judgment of the ECHR, July 8, 2003). 18
years after ratification, the four Children's Commissioners in the
devolved administrations have united in calling for adoption of the
Convention into domestic legislation, making children's rights legally
enforceable..
Convention on the Rights of the Child
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
has 54 articles, each outlining a different right. They cover four
different groupings of rights; survival, protection, development and
participation.
The Convention establishes a standard premise for the children's rights
movement. It has been ratified by all but two countries; the United
States and South Sudan.
The US administration under Bush opposed ratifying the Convention,
stating that there were "serious political and legal concerns that it
conflicts with US policies on the central role of parents, sovereignty,
and state and local law."
The Convention is supplemented by the Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict (against military use of children) and the Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography (against sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography).
Children in power
Presently,
there are at least thirty countries that have some kind of non-adult
structure of parliament, whether nationally or in cities, villages or
schools. Many children's parliaments, especially in wealthier nations,
are oriented more toward children's education in politics than toward
the actual exercise of power in adult political systems.
On the other hand, some children's parliaments do exercise a
degree of political power. One of the first children's parliaments, set
up in the 1990s in village schools in Rajasthan, India, involves
children aged six to fourteen electing child representatives who have
been able to make genuine differences for their communities. Some
children's parliaments, such as in the city of Barra Mansa in Brazil,
have extensive powers over children's issues and control parts of the
government budget.
There are also private institutions which are largely governed by children, for instance democratic schools (including Sudbury schools).