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Care and support - Protection, participation, discipline and rights |
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Landgren, K. (2005). The Protective Environment: Development Support for Child Protection. 35 p. "Children's protection from violence, exploitation, and abuse is weak in much of the world, despite near universal ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Often, improved legislation is not accompanied by significant changes in state or private practices and capacity. The types of programmatic response supported have tended to be curative rather than preventative in nature, addressing symptoms rather than the underlying systems that have failed to protect children. This article proposes a conceptual framework for programming, identifying elements key to protecting children in any environment as well as the factors that strengthen or undermine the protection available. Using this shared platform for analysis, human rights and development actors can bring greater coherence to activities that strengthen child protection." http://www.crin.org/docs/resources/publications/child_protection.pdf |
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239.88 kb) 
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Little, M. (2003). Risk and Protection in the Context of Services for Children in Need. 30 p. "The objective of this article is to review the literature on risk and protective factors, resilience and coping and to show how the concepts can be used consistently in the context of children’s services’ interventions for children in need." http://www.dartington.org.uk/documents/Risk and Protective Factors June 03.pdf |
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77.63 kb) 
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New York City. Anti-Trafficking Network Legal Subcommittee (2005). Identification and Legal Advocacy for Trafficking Victims. 45 p. "This manual is focused on the T visa, which was established by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA) and put into effect by immigration regulations published in January 2002. The T visa provides immigration relief to foreign nationals trafficked into the United States." http://www.nyc-anti-trafficking.com/assets/docs/trafficking_manual_03_2005.pdf |
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203.09 kb) 
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NYC Service Committee for Trafficked Persons. (2003). Identification and Legal Advocacy for Trafficking Victims. 36 p. "Human trafficking is a contemporary manifestation of slavery and organized crime affecting men, women, and children worldwide. Violations of human rights are "both a cause and consequence of trafficking in persons". The global problem of trafficking manifests itself in many forms as traffickers develop increasingly sophisticated methods to entrap individuals in modern-day slavery." http://www.sexworkersproject.org/downloads/IdentificationAndAdvocacy1103.pdf |
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864.68 kb) 
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OSCE, ODIHR. (2004) National Referral Mechanisms - Joining Efforts to Protect the Rights of Trafficked Persons: A Practical Handbook. 117 p. This handbook begins at the point where media stories or police reports of victims of human trafficking usually end: after the raid, when the trafficked person has been liberated by the police. Unfortunately, all too often, the trauma, ill-treatment, and human-rights abuses associated with human trafficking may not end when a victim is liberated but can continue during shelter and repatriation programmes. http://www.osce.org/documents/odihr/2004/05/2903_en.pdf?PHPSESSID=a15c792412f07e92eb080c7aa112cd38 |
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574.31 kb) 
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