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Minimum Standards for Child Protection in Humanitarian Action.

In 2010 the members of the global Child Protection Working Group agreed on the need for child protection standards in humanitarian settings. The Minimum Standards for Child Protection in Humanitarian Action were developed between January 2011 and September 2012. The process of drafting the Minimum Standards involved over 400 individuals from 30 agencies in over 40 countries, including child protection practitioners, humanitarian actors from other sectors, academics and policy makers.

The Minimum Standards for Child Protection in Humanitarian Action.

The main purpose of the Minimum Standards is to:

-Establish common principles amongst those working in child protection, and to strengthen coordination between them
-Improve the quality of child protection programming, and its impact for children
-Improve accountability within child protection work
-Further define the professional field of child protection
-Provide a synthesis of good practice and learning to date
-Enable better advocacy and communication on child protection risks, need and responses

Target Audience 

These standards are intended for use by those working on child protection or related areas of humanitarian action. This includes  1) those working directly with children, families and communities 2) planners and policy makers 3) coordinators 4) donors 5)  academics and 6) those working on advocacy, media or communications.

Content

The Minimum Standards for Child Protection in Humanitarian Action follow the structure of the Sphere standards. Each standard is accompanied by key actions, measurements (including indicators and targets), and guidance notes.

Child protection in emergencies includes specific activities by child protection actors, whether national or community-based, and/or by humanitarian staff supporting local capacities. It also includes activities in other humanitarian sectors. The Minimum Standards therefore contain 26 standards: (a) 6 general standards to address child protection needs (b) 8 standards to ensure a quality child protection response (c) 4 standards to develop adequate child protection strategies and (d) 8 standards to ensure mainstreaming of child protection in other sectors.

Implementation Strategy

Given the tremendous effort that has gone into drafting these Minimum Standards, it is important to ensure that due consideration is given to how these Minimum Standards will be promoted globally and how they can be applied in practice to humanitarian responses. This implementation plan outlined below serves as a road map to illustrate how the activities suggested to support the roll out of the Minimum Standards fit together to contribute to a greater goal and how the overall process can be monitored and evaluated. Click here to download the full implementation strategy.

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Published Feb. 7, 2013 10:14 PM - Last modified Apr. 17, 2013 3:31 PM