Lapkričio 20 d. - Pasaulinė vaiko teisių gynimo diena: Saugokime vaikystę!
Lapkričio 20 d. minima Pasaulinė vaiko teisių gynimo diena. Europos psichologų asociacijų federacija (EFPA) ragina kolegas psichologus dalintis mokslinėmis žiniomis siekiant užtikrinti vaikų teises ir gerovę.
International
Children’s Rights Day 20th November: Protect the childhood!
One fifth of the European
population are children. Today, November 20th, marked as
International Children’s Rights day, the European
Federation of Psychologists’ Associations (EFPA)
encourages its 36 national member associations to speak up and share
psychological knowledge to raise awareness on children’s rights and well-being.
Universal Children's Day
In 1954, the UN General Assembly recommended that all
countries institute a Universal Children's Day devoted to promoting the ideals
and objectives of the Charter and the welfare of the children of the world. The
date 20 November marks the day on which the Assembly adopted the Declaration of the
Rights of the Child in 1959, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), in 1989.
The Declaration states that: “The child shall enjoy
special protection, and shall be given opportunities and facilities, by law and
by other means, to enable him/her to develop physically, mentally, morally,
spiritually and socially in a healthy and normal manner and in conditions of freedom
and dignity. In the enactment of laws for this purpose, the best interests of
the child shall be the paramount consideration”.
In a world with declining
mortality rates, rising school attendance and increased awareness of children´s
needs, still too many children are exploited, mistreated and deprived of the most fundamental needs and
rights. This year, 2014, the Task Force on Human Rights of EFPA celebrates the
55th anniversary of the Declaration of the Rights of the Child and
the 25th anniversary of the CRC and takes this day to encourage all
member associations to speak up and share psychological knowledge to raise
awareness on children´s rights and well-being.
Healthy development rests on sensitive care and feeling
safe. Adverse childhood experiences put development at risk at all levels: neurobiological, psychological, behavioral and social.
Hence, Prof. Robert Roe, EFPA’s President states that protection of children and promotion of healthy childhoods should be a
prime priority to all psychologists. Roe explains: ‘In a professional
psychological context we can contribute to defend and strengthen children’s rights by actively incorporate the Convention on the
rights of the child into psychological practice. Conversely, psychological knowledge
can fill the Convention and the central principle of the best interest of the
child with theory, evidence and substance.’
About EFPA Task Force on Human Rights
In 2013, EFPA established a Task Force on Human Rights to
address the ongoing threats to human rights in the world and to more strongly
articulate psychologists’ responsibilities to do what is within our scope and capabilities to
- Raise awareness of human rights and (risks of) human rights violations
- Prevent human rights violations
- Alleviate the effects of human rights violations
Related links:
General comment No. 14 (2013) on the right of the child to
have his or her best interests taken as a primary consideration: http://www2.ohchr.org/English/bodies/crc/docs/GC/CRC_C_GC_14_ENG.pdf
(EFPA informacija)
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