
Stockholm Declaration
The second international conference on
Children and Residential Care held in Stockholm 12-15 May, 2003,
sponsored by the Swedish Foreign Ministry and the Swedish International
Development and Co-operation Agency (Sida), has discussed the situation
of children in long term residential care. There is indisputable
evidence that institutional care has negative consequences for both
individual children and for society at large. These negative
consequences could be prevented through the adaptation of national
strategies to support families and children, by exploring the benefits
of various types of community based care, by reducing the use of
institutions, by setting standards for public care and monitoring of the
remaining institutions.
The participants at the conference — more
than 600 individuals from the governments, civil society and the
research community from 80 countries — have agreed on the following:
Principles
Governments, which have ratified the CRC, have certain binding
obligations, including a direct primary responsibility for children
deprived of family care. These obligations also extend to others in
society whose actions can make a difference in the realisation of child
rights. In the case of children deprived of family care, these
obligations include:
- Preventing children from being deprived of family
care in the first case by fighting discrimination and by supporting
appropriate family services.
- Resorting to institutional care only as a last
resort and as a temporary response.
- Developing, financing, implementing and monitoring
alternative systems of care based on the principles of providing
children with a family environment.
- Regulating and monitoring any remaining
institutions for children in public care in line with agreed
international and national standards and the CRC.
- In all actions reflect the voice of youth and
secure participation from children and families affected.
Actions
In order to translate these principles into actions we urge governments
to:
- Restructure the system of public care in order to
diminish the use of institutions, develop alternative care approaches
and strengthen effective community based preventive and protective
social services.
- Strengthen the legislative framework, in line with
the CRC, to ensure that the rights of all children deprived of family
care, including those in prison, are fulfilled.
- Fight discrimination that brings children in to
public care - including sex, disability, ethnicity and HIV status of
children or their family members.
- Adopt standards for public care and develop good
monitoring procedures.
- Reallocate funds to prioritise preventive and
alternative care services.
We urge civil society to:
- Assist in the developments of strategies to
deinstitutionalize children and create alternatives. III Promote the
principle of non-discrimination, especially with regard to HIV-status,
ethnicity and disability, among families, communities, care and
service providers and governments.
- Mobilize communities to support families to prevent
children being deprived of family care.
- Push governments to fulfill their commitments under
the CRC to children in public care.
- Transfer skills and experience to local partners
and document and disseminate good practices.
- Create opportunities for child, youth and family
participation in decision-making.
We urge the research community to:
- Assist in creating systems for documentation and
monitoring of children in public care.
- Find a system of common indicators for child
placements.
- Carry out long-term studies on the consequences of
different forms of public care for children as well as their economic
and social cost.
We urge national and international
funding partners to:
- Allocate funds based on the principles and actions
in this document.
- Support the development of preventive initiatives
and alternative care systems through experience and capacity building.
- Encourage close co-operation between government and
civil society in supporting children deprive of family care.
We urge practitioners to:
- Further develop community-based approaches and
advocate for their implementation.
- Ensure that the approaches to children in public
care are rights-based.
- Secure participation of children and families in
programme design and in decision that directly affect them.
We, the participants of the Stockholm
Conference on Children and Residential Care, declare ourselves committed
to work towards these principles and actions.
4 July 2003
home
|