Policy Brief: Institutional care - the last resort
Why children are in institutions, what's wrong with institutions and what we're calling for
- Published
- August 2009
Up to 8 million children worldwide live in institutions, even though most of them have one or both parents alive.
Research shows that growing up in an institution can damage and delay children’s development and make them vulnerable to neglect, violence and abuse.
Yet the emphasis in too many countries continues to be on supporting residential care for children rather than helping families to care for them.
Save the Children believes that children are generally best cared for by their families or in family-based settings in their own communities.
This brief looks at:
- Why children are in institutions
- What’s wrong with institutions
- What we're calling for
Download Policy Brief: Institutional care - the last resort (PDF 76KB)
Related reading
- Policy Briefs - What we're calling for
- Policy Brief: The UN Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism on children's rights in armed conflict
- Getting it Right for Children: A practitioner's guide to child rights programming
- Challenging Violence Against Children: A handbook for NGOs working on follow-up to the UN Study
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