From
Foreign Policy's Shadow Government blog (Notes from the Loyal Opposition), a look at two conferences, one hosted by the Congressional Coalition of Adoption Institute and the other by USAID:
I recently participated in two groundbreaking events focused on highly vulnerable children. The first in November was the Way Forward Project Summit sponsored by the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute (CCAI)which brought together African and U.S. officials and experts in this field to make recommendations for strengthening child protection systems in six African countries. The event was held at the State Department and Secretary Clinton gave solid remarks making her the first Cabinet level official to specifically address this important cross-cutting issue.
The second event in December was an Evidence Summit on protecting children outside family care. It was sponsored by USAID with participation and support from over a dozen U.S. government agencies or offices that work with vulnerable children. For the first time, a true ‘whole of government' approach was presented that is beginning to break through the silos that typically define our government's approach to children's issues globally. USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah drew from his personal experience in Haiti seeing the devastating toll of the earthquake on children and ended his opening remarks by noting that the most important line of protection for vulnerable children is a safe and loving family.
Secretary Clinton's remarks, referenced above, included the following:
And we know, not only from our own personal experience, how we feel when we
see a child being abused or neglected or in some way denied the rights that
children should have, but that is backed up by scientific and sociological
studies going back more than 50 years. Consistently, the studies prove that
children in residential institutions too often experience developmental delays,
attachment disorders that obviously impact their ability to mature and their
success later in life. One recent study showed that, on average, children reared
in orphanages had IQs 20 points lower than those raised in foster care.
Now, over the past several years, many countries have taken steps to get
children out of orphanages, off the streets, into kinship and community care
situations. But UNICEF still estimates that there are at least 2 million
children in orphanages around the world, and that is likely a vast
underassessment. So there’s clearly more work for us to do.
What you’re doing today with The Way Forward Project is bringing
policymakers, investors, and implementers together. And we are so proud to be
partnering with Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, and Uganda, and we
applaud the leadership of those countries for putting your children first. We’re
seeking ways to improve the full continuum of care for vulnerable children. For
example, in Ethiopia, USAID is helping return 400 children from institutions to
family care or foster care. We’re working with the Ethiopian Government to
improve the oversight of all children in care. And the ideas discussed today, we
hope, will turn these good ideas into policies. And I’m pleased that next month,
USAID’s Secretariat for Orphans and Vulnerable Children will follow up on this
event by hosting the first-ever Evidence Summit on Children Outside of Family
Care.
Let’s improve coordination between different government programs. Let’s try
to provide more support to families to be able to take in children who need
kinship care. When separation is unavoidable, let’s promote early childhood
development with local adoption foster care and, when desirable, inter-country
adoption.
Clinton's last paragraph states the
subsidiarity principle from the Hague Convention on Inter-country Adoption. I like the emphasis of both conferences on strengthening existing families. Reactions?
1 comment:
I'm reading the 193 page Way Forward Report...it was interesting with real solutions to be problems, until I got to the "Adoption" section and read who the chair people for that committee were...Buckner, Bethany, all the usual suspects and even if they weren't employees they had links to the adoption players except for a small handful - 2 or 3?...oh and Elizabeth B is part of the bunch.
Call me a cynic but the writer of that section made it clear there were wide chasms in the group on what is good for Africa and their children.
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