Monitoring child well-being : a South African rights-based approach

Bibliographic Information

Monitoring child well-being : a South African rights-based approach

edited by Andrew Dawes, Rachel Bray & Amelia van der Merwe

HSRC Publishers , Distributed in North America by Independent Publishers Group, 2007

  • : pbk.

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Note

At head of title: Child Indicators

"Save the Children, Sweden."

Includes bibliographical reference (p. 595-633) and index

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

This ground-breaking volume provides an evidence and rights-based approach to monitoring the well-being of children and adolescents in South Africa. Drawing on international precedents, and subject to extensive peer review and revision, experts in various fields have compiled an holistic set of child well-being indicators that will enhance the country's capacity to monitor the status of children. Taking ideological cues from the child-rights focus of the South African Constitution, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of Children, the authors make it clear that it is not just the state of children that is important to measure, but also the contexts within which children grow and develop. Thus the recommended indicators measure both the service environment and the children's developmental contexts. The book has two main sections. The first provides the conceptual underpinnings that inform the development of the rights-based approach to monitoring child well-being and services to children. A range of domains of child well-being are addressed, including: child poverty; the quality of children's neighbourhoods and home environments; child health, HIV and AIDS, mental health and disability; early child development; education; and child protection, which includes abuse and neglect, children in statutory care, children in the justice system, children on the streets and children affected by the worst forms of labour. These areas were chosen because they cover issues of key concern for children in South Africa, and because they are all required for monitoring purposes by the Committee on the Rights of the Child, the African Charter, and UNICEF's State of the World's Children Reports. The second part of the volume contains comprehensive tables of indicators together with recommendations for measurement and data sources. Practical and user-friendly, this comprehensive volume provides practical tools for government, policymakers, academics, donors and NGOs to assess how children are doing and whether policies and interventions designed to improve the circumstances of children are effective, efficient and service orientated.

Table of Contents

  • Analytical bases: Conceptual underpinnings - monitoring the well-being of children - historical and conceptual foundations, a rights-based approach to monitoring the well-being of children in South Africa, conceptualising, defining and measuring child poverty in South Africa - an argument for a multidimensional approach, neighbourhood indicators - monitoring child rights and well-being at small-area level
  • child survival and health - monitoring child health, monitoring child and adolescent mental health, risk behaviour and substance use, monitoring child unintentional and violence-related morbidity and mortality
  • education and development - monitoring children's rights to education, early childhood development and the home-care environment in the pre-school years, monitoring childhood disability, monitoring specific difficulties of learning, child protection, monitoring the well-being of street children from a rights perspective, monitoring the worst forms of child labour, trafficking and child commercial sexual exploitation, monitoring child abuse and neglect, monitoring the situation of children in statutory care, monitoring children in conflict with the law, a monitoring dilemma - orphans and children made vulnerable by HIV and AIDS. The indicators: Neighbourhood indicators
  • indicators for monitoring child health
  • indicators for monitoring child and adolescent mental health
  • indicators for monitoring child injury morbidity and mortality
  • education indicators
  • indicators for monitoring early childhood development
  • indicators for monitoring childhood disability
  • indicators for monitoring child-specific difficulties of learning
  • indicators for monitoring street children
  • indicators for monitoring child labour, trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation
  • indicators for monitoring child abuse and neglect
  • indicators for monitoring children in statutory care
  • indicators for monitoring children in conflict with the law
  • indicators for monitoring orphans and children made vulnerable by HIV and AIDS.

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