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 1551 - 1560 of 1787

Lacey Andrews Gale,

Examines the challenges posed in monitoring and ensuring child protection in informal and formal fostering in post-conflict areas.

Shihning Chou and Kevin Browne,

Explores causal relationship between increased international adoption and increase in institutional care of children in Europe.

Miriam Temin,

Examines the institutional challenges in implementing national social protection programmes

International Social Service,

International Social Service’s first segment of the series addresses the historical background and the principles and objectives of the Guidelines

USAID, Save the Children & AED,

Provides principles of program design and technical recommendations for effective field interventions

Andrew Dunn & John Parry-Williams,

This report, prepared for UNICEF East and Southern Africa Regional Office (ESARO) assesses capacity of Malawi, South Africa, Swaziland and Zambia to manage alternative care systems for children. 

Terre des hommes,

A comparative study on the ethical responsibility of receiving countries of intercountry adoption.

IREX/ARO,

Update on all recent seminars and activities relevant to child welfare reform and deinstitutionalization in Russia

UNICEF,

Provides insight into the situation of children outside parental care in South Asia, gaps in legislation, capacity, and services, with reference to national and international legal instruments.

Keeping the Children Safe Coalition,

The third tool in the Keeping the Children Safe Toolkit builds upon the development and implementation of standards portions to address training staff on protocol