The Rights of the Child was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1989.
- Who is a child? Every person under age eighteen qualifies as a child.
- Who qualifies for child’s rights? All children are entitled to all the freedoms and intrinsic rights all other humans are entitled to.
- What is the role of the state? The state must implement the rights discussed.
- What is the role of everyone? Every action do for the child must revolve around the child’s best interest.
What are the rights of the child?
A child has the right to:
- Life and development
- Identity: name, nationality, and family ties
- Live with parents unless it is not in the child’s best interest, and then the right to maintain contact with them.
- Preserve name, nationality, and family ties
- Leave one nation and re-enter their own to be with their parents
- Not be kidnapped and be returned if they are
- Express opinion and have their opinion considered
- Express ideas, obtain information, and make that information known
- Have thought, conscience, and religion
- Associate
- Privacy
- Access appropriate information
- Be raised by their parents and have the state provide assistance for this
- Protection from abuse and neglect
- Protection without a family
- Adoption
- Seek refuge
- Special care if disabled
- Highest standard of health attainable
- Periodic review of placement if state has placed them outside the home
- Social security
- Adequate standard of living for that child’s development (mentally, physically, spiritually, morally, and socially)
- Free and mandatory education
- Education that can develop child’s potential
- Practice their own, even if a minority
- Leisure, play, and cultural activities
- Protection from work harmful to their health, education, and development
- Protection from involvement in drug use, production, or distribution
- Protection from sexual exploitation and abuse
- Protection from sale, trafficking, and abduction
- All other forms of exploitation
- Protection from torture and deprivation of liberty
- Protection from armed conflict: no child under fifteen can have an direct involvement, be recruited into armed forces, or be harmed by armed conflict
- Rehabilitative care for armed conflict, torture, neglect, maltreatment, or exploitation
- Administrative or juvenile justice: considers a child’s age works to reintegrate them into society
*Information obtained from http://www.ohchr.org/english/law/pdf/crc.pdf Convention on the Rights of the Child. Accessed through: Convention on the Rights of the Child. 1990. UNICEF. 13 Sept. 2007.