News

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.

Displaying 2371 - 2380 of 2625
Sarah Cruddas - BBC News

This article describes the deinstitutionalisation initiative in Rwanda.

Franklin Badu Jr - CitiFMonline

The Countryside Children’s Welfare Home at Bawjiase in the Central Region of Ghana was closed down recently due to allegations of abuse and 100 children were removed from the facility. Now, however, 12 children have been returned to the home.

Vatican Radio

This article describes the recent rise in migrants and refugees coming to Italy from Libya and other parts of North Africa, especially the large numbers of unaccompanied children, and the efforts being made by aid workers to place those children in appropriate care.

Kate van Doore - The Conversation

In this article, Kate van Doore describes the recent rise in the number of orphanages in developing countries and the efforts currently being made to deinstitutionalise children in these areas.

The Gympie Times

Two Australian adoptees, taken from their parents as children, are concerned with recent federal government plans in Australia to “streamline” intercountry adoptions.

Amy Wang - The Oregonian/OregonLive

A new bill has been introduced in the state of Oregon in the United States which would allow grandparents to maintain legal custodial rights of their grandchildren when their grandchildren’s parents have had their parental rights terminated.

Owen Bowcott - The Guardian

The Parliament of Latvia has issued a formal complaint to the UK House of Commons, claiming that children of Latvian descent are being “illegally and forcibly adopted by British families,” says the article.

The Times of India

A Parliamentary panel in India has recently rejected a proposal for intercountry adoptions of orphaned children, according to the article.

Gyuzel Kamalova - Tengrinews English

Kazakhstan has approved a $1.5 million project to create a database of children who have been identified as available for adoption, according to the article.

Express News Service - The New Indian Express

The Indian government has launched Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for the reunification and rehabilitation of children separated from their families at 20 big railway stations in the country, according to the article.