Logo UNICEF Innocenti
Office of Research-Innocenti
menu icon

Development and Decentralization of the National Programme of Action for Children in Namibia

Development and Decentralization of the National Programme of Action for Children in Namibia

Author(s)

Stephen Adkisson; Hugh Hogan

 

Publication date: 13

Publication series:
Innocenti Occasional Papers, Decentralization and Local Governance Series

No. of pages: 32

Download the report

(PDF, 0.00 MB)(PDF, 0.00 MB)

More in this series: Innocenti Occasional Papers, Decentralization and Local Governance Series

Decentralization and Policies for the Protection of Children and Adolescents in Brazil
Publication

Decentralization and Policies for the Protection of Children and Adolescents in Brazil

Brazil has made concrete its commitment to the principles of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in the creation of a number of State Programmes of Action. This ‘decentralised’ strategy marks an unprecedented step in a country with a strong tradition of ‘top-down’ federal thinking and limited experience of participatory planning.
The National Programme of Action for Children and Women in Egypt
Publication

The National Programme of Action for Children and Women in Egypt

The Egyptian government’s approach to internal development issues had traditionally been very much the product of a ‘top-down’ way of thinking. It was widely assumed that local and regional authorities lacked the necessary technical and resource-allocation know-how.
The Philippines: A case study in local planning for children
Publication

The Philippines: A case study in local planning for children

The 1990 World Summit for Children set in motion the development of what were called ‘National Programmes of Action’ in a number of countries. In the Philippines the birth of the overall government plan has been accompanied by that of a number of supporting schemes at the provincial level.
The Difficult Road: The case of NPA decentralization in Argentina
Publication

The Difficult Road: The case of NPA decentralization in Argentina

The birth of the Argentine NPA took place in a context of profound institutional reform, with the federal government placing responsibility for health care, education and social policy in the hands of the provinces.