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Global governmentsā€™ failure to support family policies

New report calls for measures to enable the worldā€™s children to thrive, not merely survive

A new report, launched today by the World Policy Analysis Centre, contains never-before-available comparative data on laws and public policies in 191 countries covering poverty, discrimination, education, health, child labour, child marriage and parental care. Changing Childrenā€™s Chances reveals how millions of children across the world face conditions that limit their opportunities to thrive and reach their full potential.

Published: 13 February 2013

Coauthored by Dr. Jody Heymann, a paediatrician and Dean of the Fielding School of Public Health at the University of California at Los Angeles, the report looks at both progress and lack of progress ā€“ and includes unique full colour world maps and tables offering insights into global policies on a range of topics, including which countries allow children to work in hazardous conditions; how long are girls protected from marrying compared to boys; Ā which countries charge fees for all or some secondary education; which countries support paid leave for new mothers and fathers; at what level countries set a minimum wage, if any; and which countries offer inclusive education to children with disabilities.

ā€œProgress over the past few decades demonstrates that where there is a will, there is a way to make dramatic changes in childrenā€™s lives, from survival to basic education,ā€ said Heymann, formerly Founding Director of the Institute for Health and Social Policy (IHSP) at ŗ«¹śĀćĪč. The innovative data centre informing the report was largely built through ŗ«¹śĀćĪčā€™s IHSP.

Governments, in both developed and developing countries, are not taking widely agreed-upon steps in critical areas known to make a difference to childrenā€™s opportunities. This new research aims to focus global attention on these issues to ensure that existing policies governing child welfare are fully implemented and new measures introduced which will enable childrenā€™s full and healthy development.

With an international team and nearly a decade of work carried out at Harvard, ŗ«¹śĀćĪč, and UCLA, the World Policy Analysis Centre has brought together for the first time quantitatively comparable findings on laws and policies in all 193 UN countries.

The Changing Childrenā€™s Chances report presents these ground-breaking findings for children.Ā Findings related to childrenā€™s chances is available at

Available for interviews in French and English: report co-author, Kristen McNeill, Institute for Health and Social Policy, ŗ«¹śĀćĪč, please contact cynthia.lee [at] mcgill.ca

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