Country programme action planPast Cooperation and Lessons Learned
A one programme approach The CPD programme component, Social Policy, Monitoring and Evaluation for Children’s Rights, hereinafter called, “the Programme”, comprises four elements which are integrated within a unified approach to child protection based on professional innovation and results-generation. The four elements are Social Policy, Advocacy and Partnerships for Children; Child Protection; HIV Prevention and Lifeskills; and Early Childhood Development. Each element has a focus on all levels of social and political action – State policy and legislation, institutional and professional development, and civil society participation. The Programme will support the respective governments and institutions in tackling severe and urgent issues in child protection and social exclusion by promoting better access to affordable and quality social and educational services, an intensive focus on capacity development and strengthening protective environments for the fulfilment of children’s rights. This will be achieved by advocating and supporting regional and national evidence-based policy oriented to children’s rights. This integrated change strategy focuses on strengthening the institutional base and affirms UNICEF’s role as ‘knowledge leader’ in middle income countries. The knowledge development partnerships will be the key instruments to achieve innovation and foster integrated and collaborative approaches to results-generation, tackle institutional weaknesses by introducing organisational change and developments in professional practice, and facilitate participatory monitoring and evaluation approaches with young people feeding into advocacy for evidence-based social policy. The combination of social policy and M&E derives from a view of social policy as being shaped by networks covering diverse levels of action including the political, but also including professional practice and organisational development, giving rise to the need for a ‘grounded’ evidence base. ELEMENT ONE: Social Policy, Advocacy and Partnerships for Children: This element will serve to integrate the other three by embracing them within a systemic approach to evidence-based social policy. Through partnerships with regional organizations, IFIs, governments, law-makers, other UN agencies, the media, universities, civil society and the private sector, child-focused social policy dialogue will be supported. In collaboration with partners in social institutions and with professional practitioner groups UNICEF will contribute to the empowerment of children and adolescents by encouraging their participation in policy making, the access and use of data, increasing their awareness on their needs and rights, as well as promoting youth networks and sports for development initiatives. As the middle income countries are highly vulnerable to natural disasters, the support of effective emergency preparedness capacity is a key cross-cutting determinant of pro-active social policy and in line with UNICEF’s Core Corporate Commitment for children. Integration with the other three elements will take place across four dimensions of programme intervention. They include understanding and planning initiatives, normative and legal interventions, financing initiatives and strengthening implementation capacities of social service interventions. Political Will and Commitment for Children In order to leverage results through regional and national partnerships, timely generation, analysis and dissemination of high-quality, child-focused disaggregated data will be undertaken. This will strengthen the knowledge function through improved understanding of social disparities and improve the articulation of the claims of rights holders. These efforts will enable child-friendly, strategic, national and sub-regional evidence-based policy advocacy, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation. They will in particular contribute to the progressive building of political will, commitment and leadership for children’s rights realization. UNICEF Barbados and Eastern Caribbean Office will continue its sectoral efforts on promoting and providing technical assistance for the more comprehensive implementation of child protection policies, the investment in early childhood development, the promotion of youth and the fight against HIV/AIDS. In parallel, UNICEF will mainstream child rights issues in major poverty planning initiatives such as PRSPs, poverty assessments and trade agreements. In collaboration with the OECS and the SPARC project, a capacity building programme will strengthen capacity on social policy and child poverty studies and participatory youth forums will give more insight for adequate policy response. In collaboration with the Caricom Secretariat, Dev Info will be further promoted as a tool for the monitoring of key social data and policy analysis support across the sub-region. Rights and Legislation for Children The Social Policy Element will consolidate and promote the enforcement of a protective and enabling legal environment for all children, adolescents and women at the national and sub-regional level. A view of social policy as developed, not just in boardrooms, but also in practitioner and institutional settings will allow for a programme of participation with young people and civil society both in the shaping of policy and in scrutinising the enforcement of existing laws and accountability obligations. UNICEF will continue the monitoring and support of the CRC committees in order to ensure better coherence between CRC and national legislation. Among the priority areas for further assessment are birth registration and child disability. Financial Investment in Children During the 2008-2011 period, different initiatives such as “child” and “gender” budgeting will be supported for increased knowledge on the financial and social equitability of budget allocations, social programmes or other financial interventions. Article 4 of the Convention of the Rights of the Child notes the obligation of States to implement rights to the maximum extent of their available resource. This implies the need for analysis of public budgets and their impact on children’s rights. Child budgeting will also be subject to child and youth participation through the promotion of budget literacy. Evidence and Implementation Capacity for Children The analysis of the mapping of social policy for children in the Eastern Caribbean has revealed major challenges in the delivery of efficient and quality social interventions. Actions will be undertaken for the qualitative and effective implementation of equitable social planning by documenting, modelling, disseminating and encouraging good practices and lessons learnt dealing with the delivery of social interventions. Key in this documenting will be the outcomes of the knowledge development partnerships approach. During the 2008-2011 period, through partnerships with regional organizations, IFIs, governments, law-makers, other UN agencies, the media, universities, civil society and the private sector, child-focused social policy dialogue will be supported and results will be leveraged. To this extent, best practices in dealing with child promotion will be documented and disseminated as “implementation models” in order to improve experience sharing and encourage results-oriented implementation of social policy programmes. Not only the generation and dissemination, but also the effective use of data for advocacy and policy making, will be central. National and subregional institutional monitoring of key socio-economic indicators will be strengthened through the dissemination of DevInfo, as a data dissemination tool not only in reach (number of countries) but also in depth (quality and child-relevance of indicators). The participation of children and youth in acceding to social indicators on their met and unmet rights through the DevInfo will be explored in at least one country. Social policy, Monitoring and Evaluation programme framework Social policy action fields Key result elements Cross Cutting issues Behavioral Change Communication Gender and HIV/AIDS Emergency preparedness and response With the aim to measure progress for social policy, advocacy and partnerships, following specific results for this element were brought forward in the CPD 2008-2011: Result 1. Children, youth and women’s issues are progressively integrated into key policy and public finance budgeting initiatives such as the PRSPs, National Plans of Actions and Poverty Assessments - in at least four countries from the Eastern Caribbean Countries and at the sub-regional level. Result 2. New sub-regional and national policy and legislative initiatives dealing with Early Childhood Development, Child Protection (including sexual abuse, justice for children), HIV prevention and life-skills are enforced. Result 3. Disaggregated children’s and women’s data available and integrated into monitoring and evaluation systems at the sub-regional level and in at least four countries from the Eastern Caribbean countries. Result 4. Development, implementation, evaluation and promotion of child-centered and community-based models in child protection, youth development and HIV/AIDS and ECD. The specific baselines, targets and indicators related to the outcomes and outputs for these results are included in Annex 2.2. Collaborations with UN agencies will be leveraged through the SPARC multi-donor initiative including UNDP, PAHO, UNESCO, UNFPA and UNIFEM. ELEMENT TWO: Child Protection: This programme element focuses on prevention of violence, abuse and exploitation of children. It builds on UNICEF’s role as a catalyst for change and seeks to balance responsibilities for facilitating legal reform and modernisation of the family justice system with UNICEF’s key partner, OECS. In this new phase of development, technical assistance will support the completion of model bills which seek (a) to secure the best interests of children by regulating adult parent relationships, not only in matters like custody, support, and access, but also in domestic violence, spousal maintenance, property distribution and divorce; (b) to eradicate gender-based inequality; and (c) to strengthen legal backing for children’s protection both in the content of the law as well as in promoting the consistency of children’s rights as recognised by different courts and in diverse court procedures. Technical assistance will also be provided for the adaptation and enactment of these laws in selected countries, to further extend harmonisation of family law in the OECS having regard to the shared socio-economic and cultural conditions and the shared judicial structure. In order to strengthen the implementation of new legislation and to encourage families and children to demand their rights within it, this element will be linked to a new comprehensive, rights-based communications strategy. This will deepen and broaden public awareness of how the provisions of the new laws create an inclusive and protective environment. The programmatic commitment to a ‘knowledge development partnerships’ strategy will be met in this element through a focus on service integration and, in particular, inter-agency action. A small number of partnerships with cross-professional groups will allow for the identification of at least two knowledge development partnerships for Child Protection. Their role will be to model forms of service integration and/or cross-professional action and to host and disseminate cross-professional/child-centred approaches to professional development in order to enhance capacity for meeting key results. These initiatives will include (a) inter-professional training on children’s rights under the law, focusing on responsibilities emanating from new family legislation which are to be shared by multi-agency groups; (b) the upgrade of professional practices and organization into a rights-responsive mode for social service interventions in collaboration with the police, judiciary, schools and social work professionals. Child abuse prevention, especially child sexual abuse, reporting and management protocols will be developed and implemented through this service integration and in response to evidence generated through baseline studies of prevalence and attitudes. New strategies or conflict resolution and rehabilitation of juvenile offenders will be tested through a restorative justice approach and diversion strategies that lift young people out of the traditional criminal justice system. The aim is to minimise the use of custodial approaches to create space and resource for holistic programming for young people who run into trouble with the law. A cost-benefit analysis and a professional knowledge analysis on such service integration will create an evidence base for its effectiveness and sustainability. For children already within custodial care, heads of detention centres will be provided technical assistance and evidence to form an action-learning network to align their respective centres with prevailing international standards of practice. School is a fundamental element of a protective environment, especially in respect of prevention and building skills for self-protection, but also in fostering debate about gender and the special vulnerabilities of girls. This element will be strengthened through linkage with the whole-school approach to promote positive disciplining, awareness of risk, self-empowerment, peer support with gender awareness, and knowledge of protective instruments. Whole-school strategies will be another opportunity for building multi-agency forums with direct links to communities. Use will also be made of these selected schools to host participatory fora from which faith-based organisations and other key stakeholders will begin to learn from an evidence base about the urgency for the elimination of all forms of physical discipline against young people. This in turn will support the strategy for stimulating the development of social policy responsive to practitioner realities and in collaboration with professional groups. In these settings, the element will focus on conflict resolution, the elimination of corporal punishment across the system, including in schools, and pupil research into barriers to the further implementation of legal protection. Against the backdrop of the CARICOM trans-national agenda for children’s protection, partnerships at the action level will be the OECS, Ministries of Legal Affairs, Education and Social Services, professional groups and institutions and children’s rights ‘champions’ in the child protection field. UNICEF collaborates with UNIFEM, especially in relation with programming against child sexual abuse. The lessons of the impact of Hurricane Ivan in Grenada showed that more than half of the affected population was under the age of 18, and that only by considering their special needs of protection can we improve their possibility to safety, survival and development. Building on the inter-disciplinary capacity improvement process in 2007, agencies that work in emergencies will be made more aware of the rights and special needs of children in their planning, programmes and daily work, giving special consideration to improved protection of children in emergencies, including their psychosocial needs. The Programme will achieve three main results: (a) At least 80% of the children in conflict with the law will be utilizing improved mediation, legal aid and reintegration/diversion services in at least 4 countries (b) All reported cases of sexually abused and exploited girls and boys will be utilizing quality referral services in at least 4 countries and (c) At least 80% of schools will be using positive disciplinary practices and conflict resolution approaches in at least 4 countries. ELEMENT THREE: HIV Prevention and Lifeskills: : UNICEF and its partners have supported the successful roll-out of HFLE in seven countries with varying levels of delivery in three countries. This programme element focuses on positive adolescent development through the empowerment of adolescents and the fostering of youth leadership. It builds on extensive experience and a strong contact network around the HFLE curriculum and seeks to further develop its potential to leverage cultural change in schooling and to reach parents and families. The focus of the programme will be to enhance the quality and effectiveness of HFLE interventions. A key strategy will be to place HFLE within a life-cycle strategy and a whole-school approach towards enhanced, evidence-based social policy. HFLE will continue to place emphasis on the development of positive life-styles, and the management of risk through developing the capacities of children and adolescents for independent judgement, self-management and positive decision making. It will also be extended within the life-cycle approach to embrace parental education. Knowledge development partnerships will serve as innovation centres of a network of collaborating schools implementing extended HFLE principles and within that network serve as a ‘beacon’ for children’s rights. They will also serve as a focal point for integrating the Child Protection element partnering with youth-led groups wherever possible. Trained HFLE specialists will serve as co-ordinators of programmes for teacher-colleagues to help them to integrate life-skills teaching in a range of curriculum areas, as well as for professional practitioners, parents and community leaders associated with participating schools. The whole-school approach will promote children’s and women’s rights across a schools network; it will model innovatory curriculum and professional development approaches for that network; and it will serve as a focal point for assembling stakeholder and practitioner groups around children’s services including contributing to service integration; and developing participatory strategies for the engagement of young people and families in developing an evidence base on gender, risk and vulnerability to feed into school curriculum, professional training and practice and policy development. Participating schools will host inclusive M&E Forums in which young people and their families will move from being passive recipients of HIV, abuse and violence-prevention campaigns, to being active knowledge-generators, mounting critical social enquiries; building and disseminating information; informing social policy development from the ground-up, and serving as ‘critical-friends’ to UNICEF on its role and interventions. These Forums will adopt the programme results framework as their guide. As mentioned above, in at least one country, UNICEF will explore the adaptation of DevInfo for use by teachers and pupils as a resource for such forums. A rights-based communications strategy will support the whole-school/network strategy by providing opportunities and multi-media means by which young people can realise their rights to expression and participation in social policy debates. The aim is to capture the resource of civil society in collaborative working for key results. The importance of safe recreational spaces for children and adolescents both in school and beyond will be underscored and the use of sports and culture as the mobilising forces for complementary educational activity will be supported. Building on past experiences, noted exemplary practices in the use of sports and culture for adolescent development will be explored as potential knowledge development partners. Experience in youth participation will be strengthened through exchanges on the SIDS collaboration with the Southern Pacific Island Group. Partnerships at the macro-level will be established with universities, the Pan-Caribbean Partnership Against HIV/AIDS (PANCAP), OECS and CARICOM. UNICEF is currently chairing the UN Country Team on HIV/AIDS and is building research and programming partnerships with PAHO and UNIFEM. This programme element will seek to contribute to two programme results: Children have universal access to quality school-based lifeskills education programmes to reduce risk and vulnerability to HIV/AIDS and violence in at least 4 countries from the Eastern Caribbean Countries Children participate in an increased number of school-based and out-of-school youth-led programmes. ELEMENT FOUR: Early Childhood Development: This element will be integrated with an evidence-based social policy approach as with the previous two elements. It will have two key dimensions: (i) an overarching approach to the improvement of the quality of learning and care in early childhood settings through the development of policy, mechanisms for governance and quality assurance, systems for professional development and curricula reform, and (ii) increased access to quality ECD services by vulnerable children, including children from birth to three years of age building foundations for a more effective approach in subsequent years to HFLE and the protection of children. Advocacy and technical assistance will strengthen the capacity of countries to develop policies, regulatory frameworks and standards for early childhood care and education services, supported by a sub- regional approach to curriculum reform and professional development. Innovative approaches will be taken to develop alternative ECD services to meet the needs of vulnerable families, including those with children from birth to three years of age, demonstrating cost effectiveness, efficiency and potential for sustainability. The use of ECD centres and/or primary health care clinics will be explored to establish at least two knowledge development partnerships for this element. Most urgently, these partners will develop instruments for the effective identification of vulnerabilities in early childhood and for securing access of children, particularly those in poverty, to ECCE services on a targeted basis. A key instrument for the identification of vulnerability will be the meshing of national systems for the identification of poverty with tried and tested models of community mapping. Mapping will identify a range of modalities for accessing vulnerable children to early childhood care and education services including mechanisms for economic assistance and community supports. These will be disseminated across the sub-region as a model of evidence-based policy development. Each country will be encouraged to set a target for the expansion of ECE services to meet the enrolment needs of the pre-primary aged cohort. South-to-South collaboration will promote exchange and dissemination of the rich experiences within this region and with other regions of the world. Key partners will include OECS, Governments particularly Ministries of Education, Health, Social Welfare and Labour, CARICOM and Partners on the CARICOM Regional ECD Working Group including International Development Partners, Regional NGOs and Universities, faith-based organisations and the private sector. Knowledge development partners and their associated networks will collaborate in developing approaches for evaluating quality in early childhood care and education services, associated with costing, financing and governance studies. This element will seek collaboration with UNESCO as well as the EFA monitoring process and with PAHO on health-related issues. Collaborative potential is to be explored with UNIFEM from the gender perspective and women’s rights and with UNDP on governance and community development. The element will contribute to the key result that by 2011 at least 60% of vulnerable children in at least 4 countries have access to quality early childhood development (ECD) services. One Programme Approach and Element Linkages The country programme of cooperation is pursuing an integrated and cross-sectoral approach. The links among programme elements, with the “Social Policy, Advocacy and Partnerships for Children” element as the integrating element, are highlighted in the chart below. As explained in the element’s description above, advanced integration with the other three elements will take place across by means of four social policy action fields of programme intervention. They include understanding and planning initiatives, normative and legal interventions, financing initiatives and strengthening implementation capacities of social service interventions. As visualised in the Social Policy, Monitoring and Evaluation Chart, next to the linkages between the social policy approach and the other three elements, the second, third and fourth elements have also strong interrelations. The issue of child protection for example is important for children of all ages, and especially the youngest, as many cases of child abuse have been reported from very young age on. The tracking of potential victims and other vulnerabilities, from an as early age possible, is a strong means for prevention of future incidence. The HFLE curriculum covers -to a large extent- child protection issues, as it deals with positive ways of resolving conflict and tackles with various risks and vulnerabilities. For this reason HFLE should be considered as an available and functional instrument to mainstream child rights issues in the schools, and in other youth organisations. HFLE can also be adapted to very young children, as they –in a playful way- have to be prepared to situations of risk, conflict and vulnerability. The different elements can be linked from a life-cycle approach, with HFLE as a driving force, focusing on the independence and the empowerment of young people which will lead to more positive lifestyles and choices. Pulling the life-cycle analysis even further, first outcomes of the whole school approach has learned us that interventions need not only to impact children, put also their direct caring environment such as their parents and their peers. The interaction between the different programme elements will gain pace through the catalysing and leveraging role of the knowledge development partners, who will be encouraged to extend their interventions with new initiatives to deal with all children’s rights.
ESTIMATED PROGRAMME BUDGET Estimated programme cooperation, 2008-2011 a/ (In thousands of United States Dollars)
a/ These are indicative figures only which are subject to change once aggregate financial data are finalized. Directory: faculties -> CAHE CAHE -> - faculties -> Jordan University of Science and Technology Faculty of Computer & Information Technology Computer Science Department faculties -> 2011 – 2012 EĞİTİM-ÖĞretim yili lisans programi öĞretim plani I. Yariyil Download 0.59 Mb. Share with your friends: |