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Seen and Heard: Involving Children in Responses to HIV and AIDS

   
Posted on 11-18-2009Translate this page Translate this page   
This publication explores the involvement of children, including young children, in responses to HIV and AIDS and examines issues around children's participation. It examines the challenges of enabling children to express their views and priorities effectively and suggests how they can best be supported through a range of appropriate media and communication approaches.  It draws on the experiences of people living in communities affected by poverty and HIV and AIDS, and highlights examples of initiatives that successfully involve children. Key messages from the report include:
  • the specific needs and communication styles of children of different ages need to be recognised and accommodated in responses to HIV and AIDS. Methods that support children to express themselves and communicate effectively need to be documented and more widely shared
  • there is a need to build on the documented success in involving children in decisions that affect their lives, to give them the tools and space to participate effectively in responses to HIV and AIDS
  • the different 'childhoods' and experiences of HIV and AIDS, poverty, and of participation for girls and boys of different ages need to be better understood as the starting point for interventions with children
  • meaningful involvement of children in responses to HIV and AIDS requires significant investment of time and resources over the long term
  • there is a need to address barriers preventing children's involvement, such as scarce time and resources and differences of confidence and power between children. Efforts to involve children also need to be sensitive to the household and community context, and engage communities in addressing harmful local cultural norms and practices
  • in order to assess its effectiveness, the scope and quality of children's participation in HIV and AIDS initiatives need to be clearly defined – including in relation to differences of age, gender and diversity
  • child- and youth-led organisations and networks need to be supported, both to further children's ability to secure their rights and to support children's public engagement and social awareness.
Authors: R. Vincent
Publisher: Panos Institute, London, 2009 Download the document
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child rights, children's rights, Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), 20th anniversary CRC, child poverty, health, HIV/AIDS

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