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The South Asian Report on the Child-friendliness of Governments. South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments. The report. Inspired by the African Report on Child Wellbeing (2008)
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The South Asian Report on the Child-friendliness of Governments South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments
The report • Inspired by the African Report on Child Wellbeing (2008) • Objective look on South Asian governments and other actors’ contribution to child-friendly societies– authoritative sources, neutral language, non-judgemental indicators • Progress measured at both country and regional level • Composite index and rankings– two main dimensions (legal & policy and outcomes) across six themes • Index data complemented by – detailed country-level information, chapter on child budgeting and the views of prominent CR defenders • Key information for government action and learning – designed as a tool for governments • Source for non-governmental advocacy South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments
Methodology • Strong project management– Desk studies, external partners, researchers and reviewers • Use of authoritative sources verified at multiple levels to ensure accuracy • New legal & policy indicators developed, outcome indicators selected from UN sources • Judgemental indicators avoided – focus on measurability and comparability • Equal weight given to indicators, themes and dimensions of the index – a sum total of efforts South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments
Overall index results • Allcountries have made important progress in most of the six index themes • India scores best on establishing an enabling legal and policy framework, followed closely by Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka • Maldives, Bhutan and Sri Lanka score best on provision of child-related outcomes • Overall, Sri Lanka has the highest score in the child-friendliness index South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments
Composite index South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments
Key regional progressand challenges 1. Basic enabling framework of laws, policies and institutions established – GMIs, participation and non-state actors 2. Remarkable progress in education and health , though less in child protection –mortality, enrolment, child marriage & birth registr. 3. Increased interaction and synergies with civil society 1. Implementation mechanisms often lack power to create change – coordination/authority, legal enforceability, funding, child-friendliness 2. A strong enabling framework not as good as expected at ensuring good education, health and protection outcomes– malnutrition, quality of education, child marriage & birth registr. South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments
Conclusion and lessons learnt • Post-launch follow-up– Results in Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Norway and other countries • Follow-up study necessary • Lessons learnt–Strong project leadership important–Objective, factual approach = good reception of report–Focus on achievements = cooperation to realise children’s rights –Space and opportunities for dialogue with politicians, bureaucrats and other key actors South Asian Report On the Child-friendliness of Governments