Better Care Network highlights recent news pieces related to the issue of children's care around the world. These pieces include newspaper articles, interviews, audio or video clips, campaign launches, and more.
An estimated 61 million children are "left behind" by their migrant parents in China. The Chinese government has recently issued new guidelines to protect children in rural areas whose parents have moved to cities to work.
This article provides tips for social workers and practitioners working with children and families regarding attachment.
This video highlights the impact of the fighting in Ukraine on children, particularly on children who have been orphaned by the crisis.
Legislation will soon be introduced in the U.S. state of Georgia to address concerns stemming from a recent "kinship care" study conducted to assess how the state could improve services to support grandparents and other relatives who take children into their homes when their parents can no longer care for them.
Australian politician Lunda Reynolds, a Senator for Western Australia, issued a press release warning parents and schools contemplating helping Cambodian orphanages to proceed with caution to ensure they are not unwittingly taking part in “orphanage tourism." The Senator recently visited Cambodia to look at Australian aid projects.
Pour la première fois depuis le début de la crise des réfugiés et des migrants en Europe, on compte plus d’enfants et de femmes que d’hommes adultes au sein des populations en mouvement, affirme l'UNICEF.
According to the article, Switzerland has opened its eighth “baby window,” a location where people can anonymously drop-off newborns, at a hospital in the city of Sion.
The Nigerian Forum on Rehabilitation of Street Children, a non-governmental organisation, recently claimed that no fewer than 13 million children across the country live and survive on the streets.
According to Europol, more than 10,000 migrant children may have disappeared after arriving and registering in Europe over the past two years.
A recent U.S. bipartisan congressional investigation reported that migrant children in the government's care fell prey to human trafficking.