The Child Law Resources (CLR) provides access to comprehensive information on the international, regional and national legal and policy framework pertaining to children in Africa.
The African Report on Child Wellbeing series is a pan-African project initiated to promote state accountability to children and mobilise legal, policy and administrative actions towards progressive realisation of the ideals and principles of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (ACRWC). The Report regularly assesses the extent to which African governments are living up to their commitments to children and provide critical analyses of strengths and weaknesses of national efforts made to put in place child-sensitive laws and policies and effectively implement them.
International Policy Conference on the African Child
The International Policy Conference on the African Child (IPC) is a major event aimed at promoting policy dialogue and providing a platform for leading thinkers, policy makers, practitioners and activists to positively engage and interact on the challenges facing children in Africa and the policy choices that governments could consider to promote children’s rights and wellbeing. The IPC has, within a relatively short period of time, become a high-powered event, and the premier forum on children’s issues in Africa.
Previous themes included: The African Child and the Family (2004), Violence against Girls in Africa (2006), Child Poverty in Africa (2008), Budgeting for Children in Africa (2010), Inter-country Adoption (2012), Social Protection in Africa (2014), Crimes and Extreme Violence against Children in Africa (2016) and Child Hunger in Africa (2019).
Words of Soidarity by Ms Anne-Birgitte Albrectsen, CEO of Plan International, at the Eighth International Policy Conference on the African Child (IPC), 23 to 24 May, 2019 at United Nations Conference Center (UNCC) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
An independent, not-for-profit, Pan-African Institute of policy research and dialogue on the African child.