Child Care and Protection Policies

Child care and protection policies regulate the care of children, including the type of support and assistance to be offered, good practice guidelines for the implementation of services, standards for care, and adequate provisions for implementation. They relate to the care a child receives at and away from home.

Displaying 1461 - 1470 of 1749

Peter Evans,

This background paper draws attention to the child protection reforms to be made to gatekeeping access to services. The paper draws attention to critical linkages to relevant legal, policy and procedural reforms and the reform of services to support children and families.

USAID,

Examined the eight countries in which USAID supported significant child welfare reform programs: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Georgia, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine. The paper discusses population issues, the current system of child welfare, USAID-funded activities, lessons learned, and best practices.
 

Eric Guga, John Parry-Williams, & Andrew Dunn,

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Lynda Ince - Institute of Applied Social Studies, School of Social Sciences, University of Birmingham ,

This thesis explores the experiences and meanings that are attributed to kinship care by caregivers, young people of African descent, and social workers.

Oxford Policy Management,

Analysis of policy and service model used to identify barriers in the delivery of alternative care services for children.

Better Care Network,

This country care review includes the care-related Concluding Observations adopted by the Committee on the Rights of the Child.

Laetitia Bazzi-Veil - UNICEF West and Central Africa Regional Office,

The objective of this report is to review the initiatives carried out in the last four years in West and Central African countries with regard to child protection information and monitoring systems. 

Ministry of Gender Equality and Child Welfare ,

This Minimum Standards for Residential Child Care Facilities in Namibia is designed to assist child care service providers, ministerial staff, social welfare partners, and other stakeholders concerned with the quality of child care, to establish, maintain and manage high quality care services for children in Namibia

Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, Government of the Republic of Liberia,

This Social Welfare Policy is intended to provide direction for reforming the social welfare sector in Liberia.

European Union Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) ,

Outlines the development of a common set of indicators for EU member states to measure children's rights and collect data.