Getting it Right for the Children of Wales

advertisement

GETTING IT RIGHT

FOR THE CHILDREN OF

WALES

25 th Anniversary of the United Nations

Convention on the Rights of the Child

Dr Anne Crowley

Associate , CASCADE & Cardiff University

Wales achievements and priorities for the next 25 years

• A rights-based approach

• Celebrating achievements

• Devolution an exercise in doing things differently

• Wales on the international stage

• Priorities for the next 25 years

3

Human rights are universal legal guarantees protecting individuals and groups against actions (violations) and omissions (failures) that affect their freedom and human dignity

Celebrating Wales Firsts

1 st to ban smacking in all early years settings

1 st to include children in the definition of domestic violence

1 st to appoint a Children’s Commissioner

1 st to embed the Convention on the Rights of the

Child in law and policy making

Children’s rights: a priority for the 1

st

decade of Devolution in Wales

• Waterhouse

Proportions of women in the Assembly

• Children’s Commissioner

Adopt the UNCRC (2004)

Rights to Action (7 Core Aims)

Child poverty – a Fair Future for our Children

Minister for Children

Cross-cutting Cabinet Committee

State of Children in Wales report (Children’s Well-being Monitor)

Reporting to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child in 2008

Equal Protection for Children

• Christine Chapman Short Debate in 2002 established the Assembly’s opposition to corporal punishment.

• Opportunity for legal reform in 2004 embraced by

Welsh politicians in London as well as Cardiff.

• Funding of work to educate and support parents in using alternative methods of disciplining children.

Wales’ achievements celebrated on the international stage

• UK government report to the Committee on the

Rights of the Child (2007)

• Wales’ position mentioned in the Committee’s

Concluding Observations (2008)

• Wales’ commitment to ban smacking noted by the

Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human

Rights (2008)

• Funky Dragon, Wales Youth Assembly promoted as an example by the UN Committee on the

Rights of the Child (2009-2014)

8

“ It really is one of the things that struck me immediately … is just how many people have signed up to come here today to talk about children ’ s rights and like you I think that that wouldn ’ t have happened 5 years ago, so there clearly is some sort of cultural shift happening and I just hope that it continues. …….The report itself I think is brilliant, it ’ s one of the best reports I ’ ve seen for a long time ” (Peter Clarke,

Children ’ s Commissioner for Wales).

“ I intend, as Minister for Children, and

Chair of the Cabinet Committee for

Children and Young People, to personally oversee the preparation of the Wales

Report ” (Jane Hutt, Welsh Assembly

Government)

All Change?

• October 2011 – First Minister confirms the Assembly has legislative competence

• October 2011 – Motion urging the WG to bring forward legislation is adopted by the Assembly

• February 2014 – AMs reject an amendment to the SSWB

(Wales) Bill

• November 2014 – Committee’s report on the Genderbased Violence, Domestic Abuse and Sexual Violence

(Wales) Bill

• Tuesday – agreed to set up a cross-party Committee to examine reforming the law on smacking. “ to come up with well evidenced and well thought through proposals.”

Priorities for the next 25 years

Change the law to provide equal protection for children

Time to

Act

(Re) establish structures at the heart of government that focus attention on realising the rights of children in Wales

Take it

Seriously

More Information

 childrenareunbeatable.org.uk

 childcom wales .org.uk

 childrensrightswales.org.uk

Download