Keeping children's duty-bearers in check

06 July 2007 | Story by Daniella Pollock


Launched on 4 July the book, Monitoring Child Wellbeing, sets out indicators to monitor the state of children in South Africa.

'Legislating children's rights is not enough,' say the editors of the new Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) book that was launched here on 4 July.

Indicators and a system of monitoring are necessary if we want to help children who continue to live in squalor and with abuse, and if we want to bring children's rights to fruition.

Monitoring Child Well-being: A South African rights-based approach (HSRC Press) is the fruit of Andrew Dawes, Emeritus Associate Professor at UCT and director of the Child, Youth, Family & Social Development research programme at the HSRC, Dr Rachel Bray of UCT's Centre for Social Science Research Unit, and Amelia van der Merwe, a research psychologist at the HSRC.

The book considers not only the status of children, but the contexts within which children grow and develop, and is designed to monitor the performance of duty-bearers: parents, social workers and government.

It examines the areas where children's rights have been legislated '“ from the right to food, clothing and shelter to the right to education '“ and offers a system to measure whether these are being achieved.

'This book is an opportunity to provide government with a system to monitor how children are doing in South Africa,' said Dawes.

The book and a shorter version - looking at 14 core indicator sets - are available for free download on the HSRC Press website.

Hardcopies sell for R280 each.


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