“The Minor Would Hinder the Mother in Finding Employment:” Child Protection and Women’s Paid Work in Early State Socialist Hungary

2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 818-839 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eszter Varsa

This article discusses the role of child protection and residential care institutions in mediating the tension between women’s productive and reproductive responsibilities in early state socialist Hungary. At a time when increasing numbers of women entered paid work in the framework of catch-up industrialization but the socialization of care work was inadequate, these institutions substituted for missing public child care services. Relying on not only policy documents but more than six hundred children’s case files, including Romani children’s files, from three different locations in Hungary as well as interviews with former children’s home residents and personnel, the article examines the regulatory framework in which child protection institutions and caseworkers operated. It points to the differentiated forms of pressure these institutions exercised on Romani and non-Romani mothers to enter paid work between the late 1940s and the early 1950s from the intersectional perspective of gender and ethnicity. Showing that prejudice against “Gypsies” as work-shy persisted in child protection work across the systemic divide of the late 1940s, the article contributes to scholarship on state socialism and Stalinism that emphasizes the role of historical continuities. At the same time, reflecting on parental invention in using child protection as a form of child care, the article also complicates a simplistic social control approach to residential care institutions in Stalinist Hungary.

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-124
Author(s):  
Gede Made Agus Paramartha ◽  
I Ketut Sukadana ◽  
I Made Minggu Widyantara

Children are one of the gifts entrusted by God Almighty to every parent. They have the obligation to supervise and maintain the development of each child. Children should also be cared for properly by their parents, but it is not uncommon for children to be cared for by others through child care services. When a child is under supervision at a child care service, there is negligence by the caregiver which causes the death of the child. Based on this background, this study aimed to describe how the legal protection for children who are left in a child care center and what are the criminal sanctions for the caregivers of child care center toward child deaths. This research was conducted using the normative legal method. The results of this study showed that children who are left in a child care center get legal protection to prevent children from getting acts that threaten the child's psyche. Legal protection is specifically regulated in Law Number 35 of 2014 concerning child protection. In addition, the criminal sanction for caregivers of child care toward the death of a child refers to article 359 of the Criminal Code with the risk of a sentence of 5 years in prison.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 945-950
Author(s):  
Lisa C. Lindley

Background: Children with intellectual disability commonly lack access to pediatric hospice care services. Residential care may be a critical component in providing access to hospice care for children with intellectual disability. Objective/Hypothesis: This research tested whether residential care intensifies the relationship between intellectual disability and hospice utilization (ie, hospice enrollment, hospice length of stay), while controlling for demographic characteristics. Methods: Multivariate regression analyses were conducted using 2008 to 2010 California Medicaid claims data. Results: The odds of children with intellectual disability in residential care enrolling in hospice care were 3 times higher than their counterparts in their last year of life, when controlling for demographics. Residential care promoted hospice enrollment among children with intellectual disability. The interaction between intellectual disability and residential care was not related to hospice length of stay. Residential care did not attenuate or intensify the relationship between intellectual disability and hospice length of stay. Conclusions: The findings highlight the important role of residential care in facilitating hospice enrollment for children with intellectual disability. More research is needed to understand the capability of residential care staff to identify children with intellectual disability earlier in their end-of-life trajectory and initiate longer hospice length of stays.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 112 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 732-734
Author(s):  
Margaret Lynch

The Issue. This article focuses on the work of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) related to advocacy and the efforts of the RCPCH to influence the planning and provision of children’s services. This should be considered in the context of the current UK government agenda. As the RCPCH agrees with the aims of this agenda, the challenge becomes how to influence the process of achieving them. In 1999 in a document, “Our Healthier Nation,” the UK government clearly stated that it is committed to improving the health of the population, reducing inequalities, reducing social exclusion, and improving access and quality of health care while increasing responsiveness to local needs. This commitment of the UK government is important to children, as among the 11 to 12 million children in the country, there are 300 000 to 400 000 children in need, including 53 000 children who are in public care (usually placed in foster care), where the state has direct responsibility to ensure that they receive appropriate health care. These are children who may need support from social services or child care services in addition to health services. There also are 32 000 children on our child protection registers. Overall, approximately 4 million of our 11 million children are considered vulnerable for one reason or another.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghazal Keshavarzian ◽  
Joel Borgström

Elevate Children Funders Group (ECFG), a consortium of foundations dedicated to building strong families and a life free from violence for all children, strongly believes and supports the idea that children are best able to thrive and reach their full potential when they remain with their families and communities rather than living in residential care. Years of research has shown that orphanages often expose children to serious abuse, harm and neglect, can impact a child’s physical and psychological development and is often much more expensive than family or community-based care. However, despite this evidence, the number of residential care institutions has been steadily or even exponentially increasing. Donors continue to invest in orphanages—drawing more children into institutions and away from families. To this end, this article will make a case for investing in families and communities rather than orphanages by putting a spotlight on ECFG member investments in Asia. By drawing on recent ECFG funding research and foundation investments, this article will highlight how donors can do more to help deinstitutionalisation efforts across the region.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 158
Author(s):  
Anisa Subashi ◽  
Edit Bregu

For Albanian institutions and society, application of the protection measures comes not only as an innovation in the field of child rights and protection but especially as a legal instrument that for the first time attains to put the highest interest of the child and to guarantee his/her protection in time and according to the simplified legal procedure. This paper presents types of protection measures, child characteristics for which these measures have been in place, analysis of the process starting with the identification and evaluation of the risk till in confirming of the protection measure from the Court as well as all the progress of implementation of the Individual Protection Plan. The paper offers an analysis of the demographic and analytic factors on the motives and cases where protection measures are applied. 74 measures analyzed are 74 children's’ life's where the protection system has intervened to stave off from the risk and offer the services in a safe place. In 36 of them is being realized specialized supervision in family environment where through the Individual Protection Plan, despite family services, specialized support from child protection unit is being more intensive in family. In absence of foster families, the protection measure for child placement in alternative care is applied in residential care institutions or at their relatives. For emergent protection cases, all 23 children are placed in residential care institutions for children; 8 cases taken under immediate protection and other 13 cases taken under protection and placed in alternative care actually are not leaving in street condition but placed in a safe place meanwhile that child protection structure continue with empowering plans for families aiming at returning of child close to biological families.   Received: 31 May 2021 / Accepted: 4 September 2021 / Published: 5 November 2021


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 88-93
Author(s):  
Sreekanth G ◽  
Kusuma Nirmala ◽  
Ravinder A

Background: Reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health is one of the four categories of the universal health coverage indicators under sustainable development goals target 3.9: family planning, antenatal care (minimum 4 visits), with skilled attendants at birth, full child immunization coverage, and health seeking behavior for suspected child pneumonia1 . Achievement under millennium development goals shows that in developing countries like India, mostly in tribal villages continue to face the greatest challenges in improving the maternal and child health struggling with a combination of poor coverage and quality of health care services and public health interventions. The hard to reach tribal areas face obstacles in ensuring universal access to sexual, reproductive health services2 . The indicators showed lower performance among the tribal communities as seen with most of the health indicators. Poverty, low literacy and poor nutritional status of reproductive age women give rise to poor maternal and child health outcomes along with lack of healthcare delivery facilities lead poor maternal health indicators3 . Methods: A comparative study was conducted on 243 randomly selected mothers who have children less than 7years in rural and tribal villages (150 and 93 respectively). This is community based cross-sectional study and done by using a pre-tested structured questionnaire for data collection at Shanthapur , a rural village and various tribal villages, at an average 25kms away from Adilabad town from Jan-October 2019. Analysis was done using SPSS for windows version 16, Microsoft excel and Open epi website. Result: Out of 243 study subjects, 85% (206) of the study subjects were registered for the antenatal services. The mean age of mother at pregnancy, female literacy, birth order, number of antenatal visits, person conducting delivery, place of delivery, birth weight of child, number of breastfeeding per day, exclusive breastfeeding, total stoppage of breastfeeding ,baby hospitalization due to sickness, weight per age and height per age of the child are statistically significant(p<0.05) between the rural and tribal study subjects . Conclusion and Recommendation: This study revealed that utilization of ANC services and child care services are far better by rural women than the tribal women. The role of antenatal care and child care being influenced by difficulties of accessibility, availability of these services at tribal areas are exposed from this study


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