Children’s Rights International
    Justice is Hope
    An Initiative of World Congress on Family Law and Children’s Rights Inc.

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    The Failure of the Rudd Government’s Aboriginal Policy

    Stop the Intervention Collective Sydney (STICS) Forum, NSW Teachers Federation Building, 23-33 Mary Street Surry Hills NSW, Monday 29 March 2010

    An Address delivered by Professor the Honourable Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC, Honorary Professorial Fellow, Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne
    Former Chief Justice, Family Court of Australia

    click here for a copy of this address (PDF)

    See Video of STICS Speakers:

    Professor the Hon. Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC, former Chief Justice of the Family Court
    Senator Rachel Siewert, Greens spokesperson on Aboriginal issues (click here)

    Launch of This Is What We Said: Commentary on proposed Legislation purporting to reinstate the provisions of the Racial Discrimination act 1975 in the Northern Territory

    By Professor the Honourable Alastair Nicholson, University of Melbourne, Melbourne 9 February 2010

    click here for a copy of this paper (PDF)

    Will they be heard?

    a response to the NTER Consultations June to August 2009

    Introduction by the Hon Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC

    Prepared by Alastair Nicholson, Larissa Behrendt, Alison Vivian, Nicole Watson and Michele Harris

    Research Unit, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, November 2009

    Click here for a PDF copy of this report (PDF)

    A Failure in Leadership? The reluctance to enforce human rights requirements in Australia

    Archbishop Daniel Mannix Memorial Lecture, Newman College, University of Melbourne, Tuesday 6 October 2009

    An address by Professor the Honourable Alastair Nicholson, AO RFD QC. Former Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia, Honorary Professorial Fellow, University of Melbourne

    click here for a copy of this address (PDF)

    The Law of Customary Adoption: A Comparison of Australian and Canadian Approaches to its Legal Recognition

    Paper delivered by Professor the Honourable Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC, Founding Patron, Children’s Rights International, Former Chief Justice, Family Court of Australia, Honorary Professorial Fellow, University of Melbourne

    World Congress on Family Law and Children’s Rights, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, Convention Centre, Halifax Monday 24 August 2009

    click here for a copy of this Congress paper (PDF)

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    Legal Aid of Cambodia’s (LAC) juvenile justice project in the Battambang region.

    The justice system in Cambodia lacks structure as local authorities and police have very little expertise and no basic legal knowledge of children’s rights or legal documents. Once children are arrested and detained by the police, they are typically “punished” in some extrajudicial way if the offence is minor. If a child is prosecuted and enters the court system, the lack of a separate juvenile justice system condemns the child to be tried in adult courts, under adult laws. If sentenced to prison, the child will be incarcerated alongside adult inmates.  

    All children in conflict with the law – and child offenders serving prison sentences – have rights under the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), an international human rights treaty that Cambodia has ratified and acknowledged in the Cambodian Constitution.

    Cambodia is therefore required to ensure that children in conflict with the law, and those already incarcerated, receive appropriate treatment as a right in order to meet international obligations under CRC.

    Legal Aid Cambodia (LAC) is at the forefront of the struggle for children’s rights in Cambodia. This video gives you an insight into the magnitude of the work still to be done.

    Bill Jackson CEO CRI

       

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    Projects in Tamil Nadu, India, supported by the Lasallian Foundation

    Children Rights International’s Patron, The Hon. Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC, and a volunteer film crew visited Tamil Nadu with Paul Smith, the Lasallian Foundation’s CEO, to produce a film to help the Foundation raise funds for its children’s programmes in India.

    These programmes work to assist child labourers, street children, and rejected and orphaned children to help them live safe and full lives.

    To Contact the Lasallian Foundation:Lasallian Foundation

    Lasallian Foundation
    PO Box 668, Malvern VIC 3144
    AUSTRALIA
    PH: + 61 (03) 9832 3100
    FX: + 61 (03) 9822 4377
    Email: info@lasallianfoundation.org
    Web: www.lasallianfoundation.org

    5th World Congress on Family Law and Children’s Rights

    World Trade and Convention Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, 23 – 26 August 2009

    Children Caught in Conflict

    Welcome from the Congress Co Chairs

    The erosion of human rights and deprivation of liberty in times of adversity is often excused under the guise of necessity.

    The maintenance and enforcement of human rights has a real cost in time, in money and in vigilance.

    The present times of economic concern do not present an excuse for the deprivation of liberty any more than they provide an excuse to be indifferent about the future of our world in any aspect, particularly in sustaining its capacity to support humanity.

    The future of this world can only be assured by the maintenance of rage against injustice and in a determination to so act that future generations will take to heart the example of this generation providing in its maintenance and support of the rights of the individual.

    In no area is this more important than in the maintenance and support of the rights of children, rights which if respected in children will enable them to recognise and respect the rights of others as they become the future adults and leaders. The growth of such respect in turn, will lead to a better world, hopefully one less torn by conflict and uncontained greed.

    The 5th World Congress on Family Law and Children’s Rights brings into congress again judges, lawyers, legislators, policy makers, mental health professionals and all those associated with the domestic and international recognition of innate rights. They come together to share knowledge to develop policy, to identify injustice and to seek solutions which are both achievable and lasting. The Congress is an instrument of not only the mutual education of its participants but also an instrument of public education and for shaping public opinion and action.

    We offer you a warm invitation to join with us in this Congress to add your intellect, insight and your voice to the rigour of the debate and to the search with us for solutions to the problems of children in a world of conflict and increasing deprivation.

    Take the opportunity to join in the formation of the resolutions of the Congress and leave, at its conclusion knowing that you have participated in seeking to make the lives of children the better for it.

    Congress Co-chairs
    The Hon Justice Rod Burr AM
    The Hon Justice Stuart Fowler AM

    Click here for a copy of the Registation Brochure (PDF)

    Click here for a copy of the Registation Form (PDF)

    Australia - Country Report

    Summary of necessary legal reform to achieve full prohibition

    Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children

    Prepared by EPOCH

    Settings where explicit prohibition is necessary

    home, schools, penal system, alternative care settings

    Is there a legal defence for corporal punishment which must be repealed?

    The near universal acceptance of corporal punishment in childrearing means that legal provisions against violence and abuse are not interpreted as prohibiting corporal punishment and provisions confirming a right to use “reasonable” punishment provide a legal justification for the use of corporal punishment. The following legal defences for the use of corporal punishment should be repealed/amended and the law clarified to state that all forms of corporal punishment are unlawful: New South Wales Crimes Act (s61), Northern Territory Criminal Code Act (s27), Queensland Criminal Code Act 1899 (s280), South Australia Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (s20), Tasmania Criminal Code Act 1924 (s50), Western Australia Criminal Code 1913 (s257) and the relevant common law defences in Australian Capital Territory and Victoria.

    click here for a copy of this summary paper (PDF)

    What about the Rights of the Children?

    Children and Sexualised Media: Risks, Reviews and Regulation
    Address by the Hon Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC
    Melbourne, 4 August 2009

    click here for a copy of this paper (PDF)

    SayNo4Kids Petition

    SayNo4Kids is inviting everyone to sign an online national petition to remove pornography from childrens access and view in the public arena (e.g. milk bars, petrol stations, convenience stores etc.). Click on the link below for more information

    http://www.sayno4kids.com/

    Broadcaster abused young woman's basic human rights

    The Chief Executive of Children’s Rights International,  Bill Jackson supports the media statement below and is shocked by the broadcasters abuse of this young woman’s basic human rights

    Media statement - Kids free 2 B Kids (PDF)

    50th session of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child

    Informational Notes on Juvenile Justice related issues

    Defence for Children International
    www.dci-is.org
    February 2009

    The Committee on the Rights of the Child is the UN body responsible for monitoring the implementation, by States Parties, of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, as well as its two optional protocols, namely: the optional protocol on the involvement of children in armed conflict and the optional protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography.

    Every year, the Committee on the Rights of the Child holds three sessions in January, May-June and September.

    States Parties are expected to submit reports to the Committee on the implementation of the Convention. The reporting cycle is as follows: 2 years after ratification, a State Party has to submit an initial report. After this initial report, additional reports are due every five years.

    After reviewing the reports submitted by States Parties, the members of the Committee on the Rights of the Child address their concerns and recommendations in the form of concluding observations.

    The 50th session was held in Geneva from 12 to 30 January 2009. During the three-week session, the Committee on the Rights of the Child considered reports on how the Convention on the Rights of the Child is being implemented in each of the following States Parties: Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Malawi, Netherlands and Republic of Chad, Republic of Moldova. Under the optional protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, members of the Committee reviewed the reports of Maldives and Netherlands. Under the optional protocol on the involvement of children in armed conflict, the Committee on the Rights of the Child considered the reports of Maldives, Republic of Moldova and Tunisia.

    As on previous occasions, the International Secretariat of Defence for Children International attended the session of the Committee on the Rights of the Child in order to follow the presentation of country reports from Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Malawi, Netherlands and Republic of Chad, Republic of Moldova.

    Defence for Children International is happy to present the following information notes on issues concerning juvenile justice. These notes are intended to provide the reader with relevant information on the state of juvenile justice in the countries under review, in a concise manner.

    Geneva, February 2009

    Click here for a copy of the DCI report (PDF)

    Trafficking in Unborn Children

    By John Pascoe Chief Federal Magistrate AO
    International Conference on Child Labour and Child Exploitation, Cairns Convention Centre, Queensland, 2008
    John Pascoe, AO is Chief Federal Magistrate of Australia.

    Click here for John Pascoe's paper (PDF)

    Monitoring Child Disability in Developing Countries

    Results from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys

    UNICEF and the University of Wisconsin

    With recent improvements in child survival in many countries, and the adoption and entering into force of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, disability is moving up on the international agenda. The development and inclusion of children with disabilities is a UNICEF priority. The World Fit for Children presents, among others, the UNICEF goal to “Ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including equal access to health, education and recreational services, by children with disabilities and children with special needs, ensure the recognition of their dignity, promote their self-reliance, and facilitate their active participation in the community.”

    Despite the global interest in child disability, relatively little is known about the situation of children with disabilities, particularly in developing countries. As a first step toward addressing this paucity of information, UNICEF recommended inclusion of a disability module, the Ten Questions screen for child disability, in its Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS). Twenty–six of the 50 countries that participated in the third round of MICS, administered in 2005–2008, included this optional Child Disability module. Results from 20 of these countries are reviewed in this report. MICS is one of the first surveys to use a single screen for disability across a wide range of countries. The results of this landmark survey have the potential to raise awareness about the number and situation of children with disabilities in developing countries.

    Click here to go to the MICS report (PDF - note this is a large file and may take sometime to download)

    International justice for children

    Children's rights have gained greater global visibility through the almost universal ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Treaty bodies for other international and regional instruments, which cover the rights of "everyone", including children, are giving increasing attention to children's rights. In the same vein, human rights mechan¬isms, including regional ones such as the European Court of Human Rights, the European Committee of Social Rights and the Inter-American Commission and Court, have become more sensitive to children's rights. With this increasing visibility comes the recognition that children in every country of the world suffer widespread and often severe breaches of the full range of their rights - civil, political, economic, social and cultural. In many cases, children do not have adequate or realistic remedies for breaches of their rights at national level. Seeking remedy through inter¬national and regional human rights mechanisms, though on the increase, is not well-developed. International justice for children discusses the principles of child-friendly justice at international level and examines monitoring mechanisms and current systems of admissibility, determining how easy or difficult it is for children to gain access to them. This publication also identifies the obstacles to be overcome and proposes concrete ways to remove them through specific recommendations to governments, international organisations and monitoring bodies. This work is a solid contribution to making international justice acces¬sible, friendly and meaningful to children, thus ensuring that children's rights safeguarded by conventions are concrete and not just theoretical.

    Click here to buy this report

    Kids abroad: ignore them, abuse them or protect them?

    Lesson on how to protect children on the move from being exploited

    By Mike Dottridge

    Terres des Hommes International Federation

    This study focuses on the experience of young people who leave home and travel abroad to seek work or have a better life and also children who are sent away from home by their parents. It explorers initiatives which have had the effect of reducing the likelihood that such children will be subjected to economic or sexual exploitation.

    The report sets out to go beyond identifying the vulnerable situtations faced by such children, by examining what techniques have proved helpful to children who move away from their families.

    Click here to go to Mike Dottride's report (PDF)

    Social Justice: What is The Future in Australia?

    Connections, Child Family and Youth Services, The 21st Annual WJ Craig Lecture, Melbourne, Friday 14 September 2007 

    Delivered By
    The Honourable Alastair Nicholson AO, RFD, QC
    Patron of Children’s Rights International
    Former Chief Justice, Family Court of Australia
    Honorary Professorial Fellow, University of Melbourne

    This paper discusses the future of social justice in Australia. The Honourable Alastair Nicholson suggests that an essential ingredient of social justice is the concept of justice. Many of us think of justice in the context of the law and the courts. It has obvious relevance there, but in his view it carries within it a much broader concept that relates to the common humanity of human beings and the need to treat them with dignity and equality. He regards justice as one of the most important values of any community and is the true measure of a civilised society.

    Justice is a concept that we instinctively understand but sometimes find difficult to identify in words. It is not capable of a fixed definition but it is an ideal of which we are all aware. It has been defined as the quality of being just or fair and thus as being synonymous with fairness. However justice he thinks means much more than that. 

    Click here for a PDF copy of the paper.