Miscellanea La tratta e lo sfruttamento sessuale dei bambini nell’ambito della migrazione Published: 2020 Miscellanea I minori coinvolti in movimenti migratori sia interni che internazionali corrono un rischio maggiore di essere esposti o sottoposti a violenza. I minori migranti e rifugiati non accompagnati o separati dalla famiglia sono particolarmente vulnerabili e possono essere vittime di violenza sessuale, sfruttamento, lavoro forzato e traffico di esseri umani. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 8 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: child sex trade, migration, protection from sexual exploitation, sex crimes, sexual exploitation, sexual violence × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION 2020 La tratta e lo sfruttamento sessuale dei bambini nell’ambito della migrazione. , pp. 8.
Miscellanea La venta y explotación sexual de los niños en el contexto de la tecnología digital Published: 2020 Miscellanea La proliferación del acceso a las tecnologías de la información y las comunicaciones (TIC) por parte de cada vez más personas en todo el mundo tiene consecuencias relativas a la venta y explotación sexual de los niños. Las TIC más populares e internet, se han convertido en herramientas cómplices o facilitadoras de los delitos sexuales contra los niños, entre los que se cuentan la producción y difusión de material que incluya abusos sexuales a menores ; la facilitación de la prostitución infantil , la explotación sexual, la transferencia de órganos y las adopciones ilegales; la venta de niños para trabajo forzoso ; y la captación de niños con fines sexuales. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 9 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: child sex trade, protection from sexual exploitation, sex crimes, sexual exploitation, sexual violence, technology × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION 2020 La venta y explotación sexual de los niños en el contexto de la tecnología digital. , pp. 9.
Miscellanea La venta y explotación sexual de los niños en el contexto del deporte y los eventos deportivos Published: 2020 Miscellanea El deporte condiciona notablemente el bienestar de los niños, y puede fomentar una mejor salud física, un mayor equilibrio mental y emocional, y ayudar a que los niños desarrollen habilidades importantes para la participación, el espíritu de equipo y la colaboración. No obstante, el deporte puede a su vez exponer a los niños a peligros y violencia graves. Esto incluye tanto la práctica diaria como la organización a gran escala de “grandes acontecimientos deportivos”. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 6 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: child sex trade, protection from sexual exploitation, sex crimes, sexual exploitation, sexual violence, sport, sport × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION 2020 La venta y explotación sexual de los niños en el contexto del deporte y los eventos deportivos. , pp. 6.
Miscellanea La venta y explotación sexual de los niños en el contexto de la migración Published: 2020 Miscellanea Los niños que forman parte de corrientes migratorias tanto internas como internacionales corren un mayor riesgo de quedar expuestos a la violencia o ser objeto de ella. Los niños migrantes y refugiados son especialmente vulnerables cuando no están acompañados o se han separado de sus familias, y pueden ser víctimas de violencia sexual y explotación, así como de trabajos forzosos o trata de personas. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 8 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: child sex trade, migration, protection from sexual exploitation, sex crimes, sexual exploitation, sexual violence × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION 2020 La venta y explotación sexual de los niños en el contexto de la migración. , pp. 8.
Innocenti Working Papers Do constraints on women worsen child deprivations? Framework, measurement, and evidence from India AUTHOR(S) Alberto Posso; Stephen C. Smith; Lucia Ferrone Published: 2019 Innocenti Working Papers This paper provides a framework for analyzing constraints that apply specifically to women, which theory suggests may have negative impacts on child outcomes (as well as on women). We classify women’s constraints into four dimensions: (i) low influence on household decisions, (ii) restrictions on mobility, (iii) domestic physical and psychological abuse, and (iv) limited information access. Each of these constraints are in principle determined within households. We test the impact of women’s constraints on child outcomes using nationally representative household Demographic and Health Survey data from India, including 53,030 mothers and 113,708 children, collected in 2015-16. We examine outcomes including nutrition, health, education, water quality, and sanitation. In our primary specification, outcomes are measured as multidimensional deprivations incorporating indicators for each of these deficiencies, utilizing a version of UNICEF’s Multidimensional Overlapping Deprivation Analysis index. We identify causal impacts using a Lewbel specification and present an array of additional econometric strategies and robustness checks. We find that children of women who are subjected to domestic abuse, have low influence in decision making, and limited freedom of mobility are consistently more likely to be deprived, measured both multidimensionally and with separate indicators. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 43 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: access to information, child development, domestic violence, households, women × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Alberto Posso; Stephen C. Smith; Lucia Ferrone 2019 Do constraints on women worsen child deprivations? Framework, measurement, and evidence from India. , pp. 43.
Innocenti Research Report “No Mother Wants Her Child to Migrate” Vulnerability of Children on the Move in the Horn of Africa AUTHOR(S) Olivia Bueno Published: 2019 Innocenti Research Report Children are moving on an enormous scale in the Horn of Africa. The report highlights how children’s movement is driven by different motivations, exposes children to different forms of harm, and presents multiple barriers to accessing services. As elsewhere in the world, many people in the Horn of Africa are forced or pushed to move by unaddressed vulnerabilities, including poverty, persecution, disruption of their families or exposure to human rights abuses. Once they move, vulnerabilities can be exacerbated by the disruption of social structures and coping mechanisms that would otherwise have a protective effect. Being on the move can disrupt access to services as individuals may be unaware of where to turn in a new location and service providers may, in turn, have difficulty accessing them. These dangers become acute for children, especially those travelling without families.This report is the first in a series of studies in the Horn of Africa aimed at building knowledge to improve Unicef’s programmes which support children on the move. This first qualitative study provides a better understanding of the experiences of these children. It draws on 282 individual interviews and focus group discussions with children and parents on the move, including internally displaced persons, refugees, migrants and returnees. Within each group, the researchers examined why children move and the problems they face when they do. The researchers also examined what structures exist to protect children and whether they are effectively reaching children on the move and responding to the threats these children face. The report also provides recommendations for strengthening child protection systems on the ground. + - Cite this publication | Thematic area: Child Protection, Migration × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Olivia Bueno 2019 “No Mother Wants Her Child to Migrate” Vulnerability of Children on the Move in the Horn of Africa.
Innocenti Publications 2018 Results Report Published: 2019 Innocenti Publications In 2018, significant gains were made in generating evidence to improve the lives of the most disadvantaged children, build organizational capacity to conduct and use quality, ethical research on children, and set a foundation as an important convening centre for expert consultation on next-generation ideas on children. 2018 marks the first year the UNICEF Office of Research - Innocenti is reporting on the progress of research under the new UNICEF Strategic Plan (2018-2021). This plan is the first to clearly delineate the role of research and evidence as one of the eight priority change strategies for children. This report therefore is an account of the first year of work to generate critical evidence to inform programmes, policies and advocacy for children and young people around the world. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 56 | Thematic area: Adolescents, Child Poverty, Child Protection, Education × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION 2019 2018 Results Report. , pp. 56.
Innocenti Discussion Papers Towards a Child Rights-based Assessment Tool to Evaluate National Responses to Migrant and Refugee Children AUTHOR(S) Kevin Byrne Published: 2018 Innocenti Discussion Papers This paper examines a range of tools, guidelines and formats available to monitor and evaluate various aspects of national responses to migrant children and argues for the need to integrate them into a single coherent, child focused, rights-based framework. Their current disparate application leaves gaps in the child’s protective environment and is not consistent with a holistic, child rights-based approach. Building on an analytical framework adopted by the Council of Europe in March 2018 to support a child-rights based approach by local and regional authorities to migrant and asylum-seeking children, the paper puts forward for consideration an integrated evaluation framework that incorporates and links existing practice models in order to ensure quality child-centred monitoring at each and every stage of the migration process. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 32 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: migrant children, refugee children, rights of the child × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Kevin Byrne 2018 Towards a Child Rights-based Assessment Tool to Evaluate National Responses to Migrant and Refugee Children. , pp. 32.
Innocenti Working Papers Child-related Concerns and Migration Decisions: Evidence from the Gallup World Poll AUTHOR(S) Sara Burrone; Bina D'Costa; Goran Holmqvist Published: 2018 Innocenti Working Papers Current times are characterized by unprecedented migration levels: millions of people are on the move worldwide. Thus, understanding why people decide to migrate is a major goal of policymakers and international organizations, and migration has become a prominent issue on the global research agenda. Traditional migration drivers can be divided into reasons to leave (‘push’ factors) and reasons to migrate (‘pull’ factors), and include income deprivation, dissatisfaction with public services and institutions in the home country, conflict and war, climate change, and social networks abroad. In this paper, we focus our attention on children’s well-being as a potential migration driver. We investigate it by using the Gallup World Poll, a repeated cross-section dataset of a survey conducted in more than 150 countries from 2006 to 2016. We estimate the association between planned and intended migration and children’s perceived well-being using logit models with standardized coefficients, robust standard errors, and year and country fixed effects. Estimates reveal a positive and statistically significant association between child-related concerns, migration intent and plans. In particular, the probability of individuals having migration intent and plans increases where they report lower levels of satisfaction with child-related issues, as measured by the Youth Development Index, an index driven by indicators of respect for children and satisfaction with the education system. Moreover, children’s well-being affects more individuals living in households with children than those without. Finally, migration is a child- and youth-related phenomenon: young individuals would like to migrate, and plan to do so, more than older individuals. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 68 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: child well-being, migration × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Sara Burrone; Bina D'Costa; Goran Holmqvist 2018 Child-related Concerns and Migration Decisions: Evidence from the Gallup World Poll. , pp. 68.
Innocenti Research Report Relevance, Implementation and Impact of the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting Programme in South Africa AUTHOR(S) Heidi Loening-Voysey; Jenny Doubt; Divane Nzima; Yulia Shenderovich; Janina Steinert; Jasmina Byrne; Lucie Cluver Published: 2018 Innocenti Research Report This report summarizes research findings on the impact of the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting programme piloted in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, between November 2014 and September 2016. The research consists of a qualitative study on the programme facilitators, conducted in 2014; and a ramdomized control trial with a complementary qualitative study, which was conducted between 2015 and 2016. The quantitative findings, detailed here, sum up responses provided by programme participants one month after programme completion. The participants also provided inputs five to nine months later; those inputs are published separately. Besides highlighting the impact of the parenting programme, the report describes the perceptions and experiences of participants and programme implementers. The report also discusses key policy and service delivery implications that need to be considered in taking the programme to scale in South Africa and beyond. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 26 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: parental guidance, parental responsibility, teenagers × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Heidi Loening-Voysey; Jenny Doubt; Divane Nzima; Yulia Shenderovich; Janina Steinert; Jasmina Byrne; Lucie Cluver 2018 Relevance, Implementation and Impact of the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting Programme in South Africa. , pp. 26.
Innocenti Working Papers Policy and service delivery implications for the implementation and scale-up of an adolescent parent support programme: a qualitative study in Eastern Cape, South Africa AUTHOR(S) Heidi Loening-Voysey; Jenny Doubt; Barnaby King; Lucie Cluver; Jasmina Byrne Published: 2018 Innocenti Working Papers This paper examines a four-year evidence-based study on an adolescent parenting support pilot programme known as Sinovuyo1 Teen. The parenting support programme aims to reduce violence inside and outside the home in a poor rural community in Eastern Cape, South Africa. This is one of the four working papers looking at data from a qualitative study that complemented a cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT). Both the study and the trial were conducted during the last year of the parenting support programme. The research question was: What are the policy and service delivery requirements and implications for scaling up the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting programme in South Africa and beyond? The primary data for this paper were collected through semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions (FGDs) with key stakeholders, including programme implementers. Thematic analysis identified four themes, three of which are presented in this paper: programme model; programme fit in a service delivery system; and programme in local cultural and policy context. Although the findings show the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting programme was positively viewed, if it were to be scaled up and sustainable, the intervention would need to be grounded in established policies and systems. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 52 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: adolescents, implementation programmes, parental guidance, parental responsibility, service delivery × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Heidi Loening-Voysey; Jenny Doubt; Barnaby King; Lucie Cluver; Jasmina Byrne 2018 Policy and service delivery implications for the implementation and scale-up of an adolescent parent support programme: a qualitative study in Eastern Cape, South Africa. , pp. 52.
Innocenti Working Papers “It empowers to attend.” Understanding how participants in the Eastern Cape of South Africa experienced a parent support programme: A qualitative study AUTHOR(S) Jenny Doubt; Heidi Loening-Voysey; Lucie Cluver; Jasmina Byrne; Yulia Shenderovich; Divane Nzima; Barnaby King; Sally Medley; Janina Steinert; Olivia O'Malley Published: 2018 Innocenti Working Papers Parenting interventions can dramatically reduce violence against children and improve a child’s future. Yet in the past, research has mainly focused on young children in high-income countries, and most of the research has only used quantitative methodology. By contrast, this qualitative study focuses on teenagers and their caregivers who attended a parenting programme in South Africa, contributing to a small but growing body of research on parent support programmes for teenagers in low and middle-income countries. The research examines the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting programme, which was developed and tested between 2012 and 2016 in South Africa. The main qualitative study was carried out in the last year (2015–2016) and is the focus of this paper. It complements a cluster randomized controlled trial. This qualitative study captures the experiences of teenagers and parents who attended the Sinovuyo Teen Parenting programme in 2015. Importantly, the study gives an insight into how the caregivers and teenagers changed as a result of participating in the study. Findings show that both caregivers and teenagers valued the programme and their participation fostered better family relations and reduced violence at home. Their views are important for practitioners, programme implementers and researchers working in violence prevention and child and family welfare. More research is needed, however, to show whether these changes can be sustained. + - Cite this publication | No. of pages: 58 | Thematic area: Child Protection | Tags: child abuse, parental guidance, parental responsibility, prevention measures, qualitative analysis, teenagers × COPY BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION Jenny Doubt; Heidi Loening-Voysey; Lucie Cluver; Jasmina Byrne; Yulia Shenderovich; Divane Nzima; Barnaby King; Sally Medley; Janina Steinert; Olivia O'Malley 2018 “It empowers to attend.” Understanding how participants in the Eastern Cape of South Africa experienced a parent support programme: A qualitative study. , pp. 58.