第13號一般性意見書-兒童免遭一切形式暴力侵害的權利 (英)
Committee on the Rights of the Child
General comment No. 13 (2011)
The right of the child to freedom from all forms of violence
Ⅰ. Introduction
1. Article 19 states the following:
“1. States Parties shall take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures to
protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment,
maltreatment or exploitation, including sexual abuse, while in the care of parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any
other person who has the care of the child.
“2. Such protective measures should, as appropriate, include effective procedures for the establishment of
social programmes to provide necessary support for the child and for those who have the care of the child,
as well as for other forms of prevention and for identification, reporting, referral, investigation, treatment and
follow-up of instances of child maltreatment described heretofore, and, as appropriate, for judicial
involvement.”
2. Rationale for the present general comment. The Committee on the Rights of the Child (hereinafter: the
Committee) issues the present general comment on article 19 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child
(hereinafter: the Convention), since the extent and intensity of violence exerted on children is alarming.
Measures to end violence must be massively strengthened and expanded in order to effectively put an end
to these practices which jeopardize children’s development and societies’ potential non-violent solutions for
conflict resolution.
3. Overview. The general comment is based on the following fundamental assumptions and observations:
(a)“No violence against children is justifiable; all violence against children is preventable”;1
(b)A child rights-based approach to child caregiving and protection requires a paradigm shift towards respecting and promoting the human dignity and the physical and psychological integrity of children as rights-bearing individuals rather than perceiving them primarily as “victims”;
(c)The concept of dignity requires that every child is recognized, respected and protected as a rights holder and as a unique and valuable human being with an individual personality, distinct needs, interests and privacy;
(d)The principle of the rule of law should apply fully to children as it does to adults;
(e)Children’s rights to be heard and to have their views given due weight must be respected systematically in all decision-making processes, and their empowerment and participation should be central to child caregiving and protection strategies and programmes;
(f)The right of children to have their best interests be a primary consideration in all matters involving or affecting them must be respected, especially when they are victims of violence, as well as in all measures of prevention;
(g)Primary prevention, through public health, education, social services and other approaches, of all forms of violence is of paramount importance;
(h)The Committee recognizes the primary position of families, including extended families, in child caregiving and protection and in the prevention of violence. Nevertheless, the Committee also recognizes that the majority of violence takes place in the context of families and that intervention and support are therefore required when children become the victims of hardship and distress imposed on, or generated in, families;
(i)The Committee is also aware of widespread and intense violence applied against children in State institutions and by State actors including in schools, care centres, residential homes, police custody and justice institutions which may amount to torture and killing of children, as well as violence against children frequently used by armed groups and State military forces.
“all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment or
exploitation, including sexual abuse” as listed in article 19, paragraph 1, of the Convention.The term
violence has been chosen here to represent all forms of harm to children as listed in article 19, paragraph 1,
in conformity with the terminology used in the 2006 United Nations study on violence against children,
although the other terms used to describe types of harm (injury, abuse, neglect or negligent treatment,
maltreatment and exploitation) carry equal weight.2 In common parlance the term violence is often
understood to mean only physical harm and/or intentional harm. However, the Committee emphasizes most
strongly that the choice of the term violence in the present general comment must not be interpreted in any
way to minimize the impact of, and need to address, non-physical and/or non-intentional forms of harm
(such as, inter alia, neglect and psychological maltreatment).
relate to the obligations of States parties to assume their responsibilities towards children not only at the
national level, but also at the provincial and municipal levels. These special obligations are due diligence
and the obligation to prevent violence or violations of human rights, the obligation to protect child victims and
witnesses from human rights violations, the obligation to investigate and to punish those responsible, and
the obligation to provide access to redress human rights violations. Regardless of whether violence takes
place, States parties have a positive and active obligation to support and assist parents and other caregivers
to secure, within their abilities and financial capacities and with respect for the evolving capacities of the
child, the living conditions necessary for the child’s optimal development (arts. 18 and 27). States parties,
furthermore, shall ensure that all persons who, within the context of their work, are responsible for the
prevention of, protection from, and reaction to violence and in the justice systems are addressing the needs
and respecting the rights of children.
provided by the Committee in its review of States parties’ reports and the respective concluding
observations, the recommendations of two days of general discussion on violence against children, held in
2000 and 2001, general comment No. 8 (2006) on the right of the child to protection from corporal
punishment and other cruel or degrading forms of punishment, and references in other general comments to
the topic of violence. The present general comment draws attention to the recommendations of the 2006
report of the independent expert for the United Nations study on violence against children (A/61/299) and
calls on States parties to implement those recommendations without delay. It calls attention to the detailed
guidance available in the Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children.3 It also draws on the expertise and
experience of United Nations agencies, Governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), community
organizations, development agencies, and children themselves in seeking to implement article 19 in
practice.4
(a)Article 19 is one of many provisions in the Convention directly relating to violence. The Committee also recognizes the direct relevance to article 19 of the Optional Protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography and the Optional Protocol on the involvement of children in armed conflict. However, the Committee holds that article 19 forms the core provision for discussions and strategies to address and eliminate all forms of violence in the context of the Convention more broadly;
(b)Article 19 is strongly linked to a broad range of provisions in the Convention beyond those relating directly to violence. In addition to the articles containing the rights identified as principles of the Convention (see section V of the present general comment), implementation of article 19 must be situated in the context of articles 5, 9, 18 and 27;
(c)Children’s rights to respect for their human dignity, physical and psychological integrity and to equal protection under the law are also recognized in other international and regional human rights instruments;
(d)Implementation of article 19 requires cooperation within and between national, regional and international human rights bodies, mechanisms and United Nations agencies;
(e)Cooperation is needed in particular with the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Violence against Children, who has the mandate to promote the implementation of the recommendations of the United Nations study on violence against children in close collaboration with Member States and a wide range of partners, including United Nations agencies and organizations, civil society organizations and children, in order to safeguard the child’s right to freedom from all forms of violence.
comment within government and administrative structures, to parents, other caregivers, children,
professional organizations, communities and civil society at large. All channels of dissemination, including
print media, the Internet and children’s own communication means, should be used. This will necessitate
translating it into relevant languages, including sign languages, Braille and easy-to-read formats for children
with disabilities. It also requires making culturally appropriate and child-friendly versions available, holding
workshops and seminars, implementing age- and disability-specific support to discuss its implications and
how best to implement it, and incorporating it into the training of all professionals working for and with
children.
requirements outlined in the treaty-specific reporting guidelines (CRC/C/58/Rev.2 and Corr.1), in general
comment No. 8 (para. 53), and in the concluding observations of the Committee adopted following the
dialogues with representatives of States parties. The current general comment consolidates and specifies
the measures on which States parties are expected to give information in the reports to be submitted under
article 44 of the Convention. The Committee also recommends that States parties include information on
progress made towards implementing the recommendations of the United Nations study on violence against
children (A/61/299, para. 116). Reporting should comprise laws and other regulations taken to prohibit
violence and to intervene appropriately when violence occurs and also measures for the prevention of
violence, awareness-raising activities and the promotion of positive, non-violent relationships. In the reports
it should be furthermore specified who has responsibility for the child and family at each stage of
intervention (including prevention), what those responsibilities are, at what stage and under what
circumstances professionals can intervene, and how different sectors work together.
human rights institutions, NGOs and other competent bodies to provide it with relevant information on the
legal status and prevalence of all forms of violence and progress towards their elimination.
ⅠⅠ. Objectives
11. The present general comment seeks:
(a)To guide States parties in understanding their obligations under article 19 of the Convention to prohibit, prevent and respond to all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment or exploitation of children, including sexual abuse, while in the care of parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of the child, including State actors;
(b)To outline the legislative, judicial, administrative, social and educational measures that States parties must take;
(c)To overcome isolated, fragmented and reactive initiatives to address child caregiving and protection which have had limited impact on the prevention and elimination of all forms of violence;
(d)To promote a holistic approach to implementing article 19 based on the Convention’s overall perspective on securing children’s rights to survival, dignity, well-being, health, development, participation and non-discrimination – the fulfilment of which are threatened by violence;
(e)To provide States parties and other stakeholders with a basis on which to develop a coordinating framework for eliminating violence through comprehensive child rights-based caregiving and protection measures;
(f)To highlight the need for all States parties to move quickly to fulfil their obligations under article 19.
12. Challenges. The Committee acknowledges and welcomes the numerous initiatives developed by
Governments and others to prevent and respond to violence against children. In spite of these efforts,
existing initiatives are in general insufficient. Legal frameworks in a majority of States still fail to prohibit all
forms of violence against children, and where laws are in place, their enforcement is often inadequate.
Widespread social and cultural attitudes and practices condone violence. The impact of measures taken is
limited by lack of knowledge, data and understanding of violence against children and its root causes, by
reactive efforts focusing on symptoms and consequences rather than causes, and by strategies which are
fragmented rather than integrated. Resources allocated to address the problem are inadequate.
violence against children is an obligation of States parties under the Convention. Securing and promoting
children’s fundamental rights to respect for their human dignity and physical and psychological integrity,
through the prevention of all forms of violence, is essential for promoting the full set of child rights in the
Convention. All other arguments presented here reinforce but do not replace this human rights imperative.
Strategies and systems to prevent and respond to violence must therefore adopt a child rights rather than a
welfare approach. (See para. 53 for more details).
free from violence supports the realization of children’s individual personalities and fosters the development
of social, responsible and actively contributing citizens in the local community and larger society. Research
shows that children who have not experienced violence and who develop in a healthy manner are less likely
to act violently, both in childhood and when they become adults. Preventing violence in one generation
reduces its likelihood in the next. Implementation of article 19 is therefore a key strategy for reducing and
preventing all forms of violence in societies and for promoting “social progress and better standards of life”
and “freedom, justice and peace in the world” for the “human family” in which children have a place and a
value equal to that of adults (Convention preamble).
and their “physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development” (art. 27, para. 1) are severely
negatively impacted by violence, as described below:
(a)The short- and long-term health consequences of violence against children and child maltreatment are widely recognized. They include: fatal injury; non-fatal injury (possibly leading to disability); physical health problems (including failure to thrive, later lung, heart and liver disease and sexually transmitted infections); cognitive impairment (including impaired school and work performance); psychological and emotional consequences (such as feelings of rejection and abandonment, impaired attachment, trauma, fear, anxiety, insecurity and shattered self-esteem); mental health problems (such as anxiety and depressive disorders, hallucinations, memory disturbances and suicide attempts); and health-risk behaviours (such as substance abuse and early initiation of sexual behaviour);
(b)Developmental and behavioural consequences (such as school non-attendance and aggressive, antisocial, self-destructive and interpersonal destructive behaviours) can lead, inter alia, to deterioration of relationships, exclusion from school and coming into conflict with the law). There is evidence that exposure to violence increases a child’s risk of further victimization and an accumulation of violent experiences, including later intimate partner violence.5
(c)The impact on children, in particular adolescents, of high-handed or “zero tolerance” State policies in response to child violence is highly destructive as it is a punitive approach victimizing children by reacting to violence with more violence. Such policies are often shaped by public concerns over citizens’ security and by the high profile given to these issues by mass media. State policies on public security must carefully consider the root causes of children’s offences in order to provide a way out of a vicious circle of retaliating violence with violence.
to protection are enormous and unacceptable. Direct costs may include medical care, legal and social
welfare services and alternative care. Indirect costs may include possible lasting injury or disability,
psychological costs or other impacts on a victim’s quality of life, disruption or discontinuation of education,
and productivity losses in the future life of the child.They also include costs associated with the criminal
justice system as a result of crimes committed by children who have experienced violence. The social costs
arising from a demographic imbalance due to the discriminatory elimination of girls before birth are high and
have potential implications for increased violence against girls including abduction, early and forced
marriage, trafficking for sexual purposes and sexual violence.
A. Article 19, paragraph 1
1. “… all forms of ...”
17. No exceptions.The Committee has consistently maintained the position that all forms of violence against children, however light, are unacceptable. “All forms of physical or mental violence” does not leave room for any level of legalized violence against children. Frequency, severity of harm and intent to harm are not prerequisites for the definitions of violence. States parties may refer to such factors in intervention strategies in order to allow proportional responses in the best interests of the child, but definitions must in no way erode the child’s absolute right to human dignity and physical and psychological integrity by describing some forms of violence as legally and/or socially acceptable.
19.Forms of violence – overview. The following non-exhaustive lists outlining forms of violence apply to all children in all settings and in transit between settings. Children can experience violence at the hands of adults, and violence may also occur among children. Furthermore, some children harm themselves. The Committee recognizes that forms of violence often co-occur and that they can span the categories used here for convenience. Both girls and boys are at risk of all forms of violence, but violence often has a gender component. For example, girls may experience more sexual violence at home than boys whereas boys may be more likely to encounter – and experience violence within – the criminal justice system. (See also para. 72 (b) on the gender dimensions of violence).
(a)Physical neglect: failure to protect a child from harm,6 including through lack of supervision, or failure to provide the child with basic necessities including adequate food, shelter, clothing and basic medical care;
(b)Psychological or emotional neglect: including lack of any emotional support and love, chronic inattention to the child, caregivers being “psychologically unavailable” by overlooking young children’s cues and signals, and exposure to intimate partner violence, drug or alcohol abuse;
(c)Neglect of children’s physical or mental health: withholding essential medical care;
(d)Educational neglect: failure to comply with laws requiring caregivers to secure their children’s education through attendance at school or otherwise; and
(e)Abandonment: a practice which is of great concern and which can disproportionately affect, inter alia, children out of wedlock and children with disabilities in some societies.7
(a)All forms of persistent harmful interactions with the child, for example, conveying to children that they are worthless, unloved, unwanted, endangered or only of value in meeting another’s needs;
(b)Scaring, terrorizing and threatening; exploiting and corrupting; spurning and rejecting; isolating, ignoring and favouritism;
(c)Denying emotional responsiveness; neglecting mental health, medical and educational needs;
(d)Insults, name-calling, humiliation, belittling, ridiculing and hurting a child’s feelings;
(e)Exposure to domestic violence;
(f)Placement in solitary confinement, isolation or humiliating or degrading conditions of detention; and
(g)Psychological bullying and hazing8 by adults or other children, including via information and communication technologies (ICTs) such as mobile phones and the Internet (known as “cyberbullying”).
(a)All corporal punishment and all other forms of torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment; and
(b)Physical bullying and hazingby adults and by other children.
(a)Forced sterilization, particularly girls;
(b)Violence in the guise of treatment (for example electroconvulsive treatment (ECT) and electric shocks used as “aversion treatment” to control children’s behaviour); and
(c)Deliberate infliction of disabilities on children for the purpose of exploiting them for begging in the streets or elsewhere.
(a)The inducement or coercion of a child to engage in any unlawful or psychologically harmful sexual activity;9
(b)The use of children in commercial sexual exploitation; and
(c)The use of children in audio or visual images of child sexual abuse;
(d)Child prostitution, sexual slavery, sexual exploitation in travel and tourism, trafficking (within and between countries) and sale of children for sexual purposes and forced marriage. Many children experience sexual victimization which is not accompanied by physical force or restraint but which is nonetheless psychologically intrusive, exploitive and traumatic.
28.Self-harm. This includes eating disorders, substance use and abuse, self-inflicted injuries, suicidal thoughts, suicide attempts and actual suicide. Suicide among adolescents is of particular concern to the Committee.
(a)Corporal punishment and other cruel or degrading forms of punishment;
(b)Female genital mutilation;
(c)Amputations, binding, scarring, burning and branding;
(d)Violent and degrading initiation rites; force-feeding of girls; fattening; virginity testing (inspecting girls’ genitalia);
(e)Forced marriage and early marriage;
(f)“Honour” crimes; “retribution” acts of violence (where disputes between different groups are taken out on children of the parties involved); dowry-related death and violence;
(g)Accusations of “witchcraft” and related harmful practices such as “exorcism”;
(h)Uvulectomy and teeth extraction.
(a)Sexual abuse of children to produce both visual and audio child abuse images facilitated by the Internet and other ICT;
(b)The process of taking, making, permitting to take, distributing, showing, possessing or advertising indecent photographs or pseudophotographs (“morphing”) and videos of children and those making a mockery of an individual child or categories of children;
(c)Children as users of ICT:
(i)As recipients of information, children may be exposed to actually or potentially harmful advertisements, spam, sponsorship, personal information and content which is aggressive, violent, hateful, biased, racist, pornographic11, unwelcome and/or misleading;
(ii)As children in contact with others through ICT, children may be bullied, harassed or stalked (child “luring”) and/or coerced, tricked or persuaded into meeting strangers off-line, being “groomed” for involvement in sexual activities and/or providing personal information;
(iii)As actors, children may become involved in bullying or harassing others, playing games that negatively influence their psychological development, creating and uploading inappropriate sexual material, providing misleading information or advice, and/or illegal downloading, hacking, gambling, financial scams and/or terrorism.12
33.Definition of “caregivers”.The Committee considers that, while respecting the evolving capacities and progressive autonomy of the child, all human beings below the age of 18 years are nonetheless “in the care of” someone, or should be. There are only three conditions for children: emancipated13, in the care of primary or proxy caregivers, or in the de facto care of the State. The definition of “caregivers”, referred to in article 19, paragraph 1, as “parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of the child”, covers those with clear, recognized legal, professional-ethical and/or cultural responsibility for the safety, health, development and well-being of the child, primarily: parents, foster parents, adoptive parents, caregivers in kafalah of Islamic law, guardians, extended family and community members; education, school and early childhood personnel; child caregivers employed by parents; recreational and sports coaches – including youth group supervisors; workplace employers or supervisors; and institutional personnel (governmental or non-governmental) in the position of caregivers ‑ for example responsible adults in health-care, juvenile-justice and drop-in and residential-care settings. In the case of unaccompanied children, the State is the de facto caregiver.
3. “shall take …”
37.“Shall take” is a term which leaves no leeway for the discretion of States parties. Accordingly, States parties are under strict obligation to undertake “all appropriate measures” to fully implement this right for all children.
38.General measures of implementation and monitoring. The Committee draws the attention of States parties to general comment No. 5 (2003) on general measures of implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.16 The Committee also refers States parties to its general comment No. 2 (2002) on the role of independent national human rights institutions in the promotion and protection of the rights of the child. These measures of implementation and monitoring are essential to bring article 19 into reality.
(a)Ratify the two Optional Protocols to the Convention, and other international and regional human rights instruments that provide protection for children, including the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and its Optional Protocol and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment;
(b)Review and withdraw declarations and reservations contrary to the object and purpose of the Convention or otherwise contrary to international law;
(c)Strengthen cooperation with treaty bodies and other human rights mechanisms;
(d)Review and amend domestic legislation in line with article 19 and its implementation within the holistic framework of the Convention, establishing a comprehensive policy on child rights and ensuring absolute prohibition of all forms of violence against children in all settings and effective and appropriate sanctions against perpetrators;17
(e)Provide adequate budget allocations for the implementation of legislation and all other measures adopted to end violence against children;
(f)Ensure the protection of child victims and witnesses and effective access to redress and reparation;
(g)Ensure that relevant legislation provides adequate protection of children in relation to media and ICT;
(h)Establish and implement social programmes to promote optimal positive child-rearing by providing, through integrated services, necessary support for the child and for those who have the care of the child;
(i)Enforce law and judicial procedures in a child-friendly way, including remedies available to children when rights are violated;
(j)Establish and support an independent national institution of children’s rights.
(a)At the national and sub-national government levels:
(i)Establishing a government focal point to coordinate child protection strategies and services;
(ii)Defining the roles, responsibilities and relationships between stakeholders on inter-agency steering committees with a view to their effectively managing, monitoring and holding accountable the implementing bodies at national and subnational levels;
(iii)Ensuring that the process of decentralizing services safeguards their quality, accountability and equitable distribution;
(iv)Implementing systematic and transparent budgeting processes in order to make the best use of allocated resources for child protection, including prevention;
(v)Establishing a comprehensive and reliable national data collection system in order to ensure systematic monitoring and evaluation of systems (impact analyses), services, programmes and outcomes based on indicators aligned with universal standards, and adjusted for and guided by locally established goals and objectives;
(vi)Providing independent national human rights institutions with support and promoting the establishment of specific child rights mandates such as child rights ombudsmen where these do not yet exist.18
(b)At the levels of governmental, professional and civil society institutions:
(i)Developing and implementing (through participatory processes which encourage ownership and sustainability):
a.Intra- and inter-agency child protection policies;
b.Professional ethics codes, protocols, memoranda of understanding and standards of care for all childcare services and settings (including daycare centres, schools, hospitals, sport clubs and residential institutions etc.);
(ii)Involving academic teaching and training institutions with regard to child protection initiatives;
(iii)Promoting good research programmes.
(a)Social policy measures to reduce risk and prevent violence against children, for example:
(i)Integration of child caregiving and protection measures into mainstream systems of social policy;
(ii)Identification and prevention of factors and circumstances which hinder vulnerable groups’ access to services and full enjoyment of their rights (including indigenous and minority children and children with disabilities, among others);
(iii)Poverty reduction strategies, including financial and social support to families at risk;
(iv)Public health and safety, housing, employment and education policies;
(v)Improved access to health, social welfare and justice services;
(vi)“Child-friendly cities” planning;
(vii)Reduced demand for and access to alcohol, illegal drugs and weapons;
(viii)Collaboration with the mass media and the ICT industry to devise, promote and enforce global standards for child caregiving and protection;
(ix)Development of guidelines for protecting children from information and material produced by mass media disrespecting the human dignity and integrity of the child, abolishing stigmatizing language, refraining from the dissemination of re-victimizing reports on events in family or elsewhere affecting a child and promoting professional methods of investigation based on the use of diverse sources which can be examined by all parties involved;
(x)Opportunities for children to express their view and expectations in the media and be not only engaged in children’s programmes, but also involved in the production and transmission of all kinds of information, including as reporters, analysts and commentators in order to support an adequate image of children and childhood in the public.
(b)Socialprogrammes to support the child individually and to support the child’s family and other caregivers to provide optimal positive child-rearing, for example:
(i)For children: childcare, early child development and after-school care programmes; child and youth groups and clubs; counselling support to children experiencing difficulties (including self-harm); 24-hour toll-free child helplines with trained personnel; foster family services which are subject to periodic review;
(ii)For families and other caregivers: community-based mutual-help groups to address psychosocial and economic challenges (for example parenting and micro-credit groups); welfare programmes to support families’ standard of living, including direct allowances to children at a certain age; counselling support to caregivers having difficulties with employment, housing and/or child-rearing; therapeutic programmes (including mutual help groups) to assist caregivers with challenges related to domestic violence, addictions to alcohol or drugs or with other mental health needs.
(a)For all stakeholders: public information programmes, including awareness campaigns, via opinion leaders and the media, to promote positive child-rearing and to combat negative societal attitudes and practices which condone or encourage violence; dissemination of the Convention, the present general comment and State party reports in child friendly and accessible formats; supporting measures to educate and advise on protection in the context of ICTs;
(b)For children: provision of accurate, accessible and age-appropriate information and empowerment on life skills, self-protection and specific risks, including those relating to ICTs and how to develop positive peer relationships and combat bullying; empowerment regarding child rights in general ‑ and in particular on the right to be heard and to have their views taken seriously ‑ through the school curriculum and in other ways;
(c)For families and communities: education on positive child-rearing for parents and caregivers; provision of accurate and accessible information on specific risks and how to listen to children and take their views seriously;
(d)For professionals and institutions (government and civil society):
(i)Providing initial and in-service general and role-specific training (including inter-sectoral where necessary) on a child rights approach to article 19 and its application in practice, for all professionals and non-professionals working with, and for, children (including teachers at all levels of the educational system, social workers, medical doctors, nurses and other health professionals, psychologists, lawyers, judges, police, probation and prison officers, journalists, community workers, residential caregivers, civil servants and public officials, asylum officers and traditional and religious leaders);
(ii)Developing officially recognized certification schemes in association with educational and training institutions and professional societies in order to regulate and acknowledge such training;
(iii)Ensuring that the Convention is part of the educational curriculum of all professionals expected to work with and for children;
(iv)Supporting “child-friendly schools” and other initiatives which include, inter alia, respect for children’s participation;
(v)Promoting research on child caregiving and protection.
B. Article 19, paragraph 2
“such protective measures should, as appropriate, include…”
45.Range of interventions. A holistic child protection system requires the provision of comprehensive and integrated measures across the full range of stages identified in article 19, paragraph 2, taking account of the socio-cultural traditions and legal system of the respective State party.19
(a)For all stakeholders:
(i)Challenging attitudes which perpetuate the tolerance and condoning of violence in all its forms, including gender, race, colour, religion, ethnic or social origin, disability and other power imbalances;
(ii)Disseminating information regarding the Convention’s holistic and positive approach to child protection through creative public campaigns, schools and peer education, family, community and institutional educational initiatives, professionals and professional groups, NGOs and civil society;
(iii)Developing partnerships with all sectors of society, including children themselves, NGOs and the media;
(b)For children:
(i)Registering all children to facilitate their access to services and redress procedures;
(ii)Supporting children to protect themselves and their peers through awareness of their rights and development of social skills as well as age-appropriate empowerment strategies;
(iii)Implementing “mentoring” programmes that engage responsible and trusted adults in the lives of children identified as needing extra support beyond that provided by their caregivers;
(c) For families and communities:
(i)Supporting parents and caregivers to understand, embrace and implement good child-rearing, based on knowledge of child rights, child development and techniques for positive discipline in order to support families’ capacity to provide children with care in a safe environment;
(ii)Providing pre- and post-natal services, home visitation programmes, quality early-childhood development programmes, and income-generation programmes for disadvantaged groups;
(iii)Strengthening the links between mental health services, substance abuse treatment and child protection services;
(iv)Providing respite programmes and family support centres for families facing especially difficult circumstances;
(v)Providing shelters and crisis centres for parents (mostly women) who have experienced violence at home and their children;
(vi)Providing assistance to the family by adopting measures that promote family unity and ensure for children the full exercise and enjoyment of their rights in private settings, abstaining from unduly interfering in children’s private and family relations, depending on circumstances.20
(d)For professionals and institutions (Government and civil society):
(i)Identifying prevention opportunities and informing policy and practice on the basis of research studies and data collection;
(ii)Implementing, through a participatory process, rights-based child protection policies and procedures and professional ethics codes and standards of care;
(iii)Preventing violence in care and justice settings by, inter alia, developing and implementing community-based services in order to make use of institutionalization and detention only as a last resort and only if in the best interest of the child.
51.Investigation. Investigation of instances of violence, whether reported by the child, a representative or an external party, must be undertaken by qualified professionals who have received role-specific and comprehensive training, and require a child rights-based and child-sensitive approach. Rigorous but child-sensitive investigation procedures will help to ensure that violence is correctly identified and help provide evidence for administrative, civil, child-protection and criminal proceedings. Extreme care must be taken to avoid subjecting the child to further harm through the process of the investigation. Towards this end, all parties are obliged to invite and give due weight to the child’s views.
(a)Children and their parents should be promptly and adequately informed by the justice system or other competent authorities (such as the police, immigration, or educational, social or health-care services);
(b)Child victims of violence should be treated in a child-friendly and sensitive manner throughout the justice process, taking into account their personal situation, needs, age, gender, disability and level of maturity and fully respecting their physical, mental and moral integrity;
(c)Judicial involvement should be preventive where possible, proactively encouraging positive behaviour as well as prohibiting negative behaviour. Judicial involvement should be an element of a coordinated and integrated approach across sectors, supporting and facilitating other professionals to work with children, caregivers, families and communities, and facilitating access to the full range of child caregiving and protection services available;
(d)In all proceedings involving children victims of violence, the celerity principle must be applied, while respecting the rule of law.
(a)Differentiated and mediated responses such as family group conferencing, alternative dispute-resolution mechanisms, restorative justice and kith and kin agreements (where processes are human-rights respecting, accountable and managed by trained facilitators);
(b)Juvenile or family court intervention leading to a specific measure of child protection;
(c)Criminal law procedures, which must be strictly applied in order to abolish the widespread practice of de jure or de facto impunity, in particular of State actors;
(d)Disciplinary or administrative proceedings against professionals for neglectful or inappropriate behaviour in dealing with suspected cases of child maltreatment (either internal proceedings in the context of professional bodies for breaches of codes of ethics or standards of care, or external proceedings);
(e)Judicial orders to ensure compensation and rehabilitation for children who have suffered from violence in its various forms.
(a)Inter-sectoral coordination, mandated by protocols and memorandums of understanding as necessary;
(b)The development and implementation of systematic and ongoing data collection and analysis;
(c)The development and implementation of a research agenda; and
(d)The development of measurable objectives and indicators in relation to policies, processes and outcomes for children and families.
59.Definition of a child rights approach. Respect for the dignity, life, survival, well-being, health, development, participation and non-discrimination of the child as a rights-bearing person should be established and championed as the pre-eminent goal of States parties’ policies concerning children. This is best realized by respecting, protecting and fulfilling all of the rights in the Convention (and its Optional Protocols). It requires a paradigm shift away from child protection approaches in which children are perceived and treated as “objects” in need of assistance rather than as rights holders entitled to non-negotiable rights to protection. A child rights approach is one which furthers the realization of the rights of all children as set out in the Convention by developing the capacity of duty bearers to meet their obligations to respect, protect and fulfil rights (art. 4) and the capacity of rights holders to claim their rights, guided at all times by the rights to non-discrimination (art. 2), consideration of the best interests of the child (art. 3, para. 1), life, survival and development (art. 6), and respect for the views of the child (art. 12). Children also have the right to be directed and guided in the exercise of their rights by caregivers, parents and community members, in line with children’s evolving capacities (art. 5). This child rights approach is holistic and places emphasis on supporting the strengths and resources of the child him/herself and all social systems of which the child is a part: family, school, community, institutions, religious and cultural systems.
(a)Prevention of all forms of violence and the promotion of positive child-rearing, emphasizing the need for a focus on primary prevention in national coordinating frameworks;
(b)Adequate investment in human, financial and technical resources dedicated to the implementation of a child rights-based and integrated child protection and support system.
VI. National coordinating framework on violence against children
68.Beyond national plans of action.The Committee recognizes that many national plans of action adopted by States parties to implement the rights of the child include measures to prohibit, prevent and eliminate all forms of violence against children. Such plans of action, while contributing to more enjoyment by children of their rights, have nevertheless faced many challenges in their implementation, monitoring, evaluation and follow-up. For example, they have often lacked links with the overall development policy, programmes, budget and coordinating mechanisms. In order to establish a more feasible and flexible instrument, the Committee is proposing a “coordinating framework on violence against children” for all child rights-based measures to protect children from violence in all its forms and to support a protective environment.24 Such a coordinating framework can be used in place of national plans of action where these do not yet exist or where they are proving unwieldy. Where national plans of action are being effectively implemented already, the coordinating framework can nonetheless complement those efforts, stimulate discussion and generate new ideas and resources to improve their functioning.
71.The process of developing a national coordinating framework. There is no single model for such coordinating frameworks for freedom from all forms of violence. Some countries have invested in a discrete system of protecting children whereas others prefer to integrate protection issues into mainstream systems of implementing the rights of children. Experience shows that the process of developing a system is essential to its successful implementation. Skilful facilitation is required to ensure the participation of and ownership by senior representatives of all stakeholder groups, possibly through a multidisciplinary working group which has appropriate decision-making power, which meets regularly and which is prepared to be ambitious. A system of prevention and protection against all forms of violence should build on the strengths in existing formal and informal structures, services and organizations. Gaps should be identified and filled, based on the obligations outlined in article 19 and the Convention more broadly, and in other international and regional human rights instruments, and supported by the guidance provided in the United Nations study on violence against children, the present general comment and additional implementation supports. National planning should be a transparent and inclusive process, with full disclosure to the general public and assurance of the involvement of Government, NGOs, research and professional practice experts, parents and children. It should be accessible and understandable to both children and adults. The national coordinating framework should be fully costed and financed, including human and technical resources, and presented, if possible, within the national child budget.
(a)Child rights approach. This approach is based on the declaration of the child as a rights holder and not a beneficiary of benevolent activities of adults. It includes respecting and encouraging consultation and cooperation with, and the agency of, children in the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the coordinating framework and specific measures therein, taking account of the age and evolving capacities of the child or children;
(b)The gender dimensions of violence against children. States parties should ensure that policies and measures take into account the different risks facing girls and boys in respect of various forms of violence in various settings. States should address all forms of gender discrimination as part of a comprehensive violence-prevention strategy. This includes addressing gender-based stereotypes, power imbalances, inequalities and discrimination which support and perpetuate the use of violence and coercion in the home, in school and educational settings, in communities, in the workplace, in institutions and in society more broadly. Men and boys must be actively encouraged as strategic partners and allies, and along with women and girls, must be provided with opportunities to increase their respect for one another and their understanding of how to stop gender discrimination and its violent manifestations;
(c)Primary (general) prevention. See paragraph 42 of the present general comment for details;
(d)The primary position of families in child caregiving and protection strategies.25Families (including extended families and other forms of family-type care arrangements) have the greatest potential to protect children and to prevent violence. Families can also support and empower children to protect themselves. The need to strengthen family life, support families and work with families with challenges must therefore be a priority child protection activity at every stage of intervention, particularly prevention (through establishing good child caregiving) and in early intervention. However, the Committee also recognizes that much of the violence experienced by children, including sexual abuse, takes place within a family context and stresses the necessity of intervening in families if children are exposed to violence by family members;
(e)Resilience and protective factors. It is of critical importance to understand resilience and protective factors, i.e. internal and external strengths and supports which promote personal security and reduce abuse and neglect and their negative impact. Protective factors include stable families; nurturing child-rearing by adults who meet the child’s physical and psychosocial needs; positive non-violent discipline; secure attachment of the child to at least one adult; supportive relationships with peers and others (including teachers); a social environment that fosters pro-social, non-violent and non-discriminatory attitudes and behaviours; high levels of community social cohesion; and thriving social networks and neighbourhood connections;
(f)Risk factors. Proactive, tailored measures need to be taken to reduce the risk factors to which individual children or groups of children may be exposed in general or in particular contexts. This includes parental risk factors such as substance abuse, mental health problems and social isolation as well as family risk factors such as poverty, unemployment, discrimination and marginalization. At a universal level all children aged 0-18 years are considered vulnerable until the completion of their neural, psychological, social and physical growth and development. Babies and young children are at higher risk due to the immaturity of their developing brain and their complete dependency on adults. Both girls and boys are at risk, but violence often has a gender component;
(g)Children in potentially vulnerable situations. Groups of children which are likely to be exposed to violence include, but are not limited to, children: not living with their biological parents, but in various forms of alternative care; not registered at birth; in street situations; in actual or perceived conflict with the law; with physical disabilities, sensory disabilities, learning disabilities, psychosocial disabilities and congenital, acquired and/or chronic illnesses or serious behavioural problems; who are indigenous26 and from other ethnic minorities; from minority religious or linguistic groups; who are lesbian, gay, transgender or transsexual; at risk of harmful traditional practices; in early marriage (especially girls, and especially but not exclusively forced marriage); in hazardous child labour, including the worst forms; who are on the move as migrants or refugees, or who are displaced and/or trafficked; who have already experienced violence; who experience and witness violence in the home and in communities; in low socio-economic urban environments, where guns, weapons, drugs and alcohol may be easily available; living in accident- or disaster-prone areas or in toxic environments; affected by HIV/AIDS or who are themselves HIV infected; who are malnourished; looked after by other children; who are themselves carers and heads of households; born to parents who are themselves still under 18; who are unwanted, born prematurely or part of a multiple birth; hospitalized with inadequate supervision or contact with caregivers; or exposed to ICTs without adequate safeguards, supervision or empowerment to protect themselves. Children in emergencies are extremely vulnerable to violence when, as a consequence of social and armed conflicts, natural disasters and other complex and chronic emergencies, social systems collapse, children become separated from their caregivers and caregiving and safe environments are damaged or even destroyed;
(h)Resource allocation. Human, financial and technical resources needed across different sectors must be allocated to the maximum extent of available resources. Robust monitoring mechanisms must be developed and implemented to ensure accountability regarding allocation of budgets and their efficient utilization;
(i)Coordination mechanisms. Mechanisms must be explicitly outlined to ensure effective coordination at central, regional and local levels, between different sectors and with civil society, including the empirical research community. These mechanisms must be supported by the administrative measures outlined above;
(j)Accountability. It must be ensured that States parties, national and local agencies and organizations, and relevant civil society stakeholders proactively and cooperatively establish and apply standards, indicators, tools, and systems of monitoring, measurement and evaluation to fulfil their obligations and commitments to protect children from violence. The Committee has consistently expressed its support for systems of accountability, including in particular through data collection and analysis, indicator construction, monitoring and evaluation as well as support for independent human rights institutions. The Committee recommends that States parties publish an annual report on progress made with regard to the prohibition, prevention and elimination of violence, submit it to parliament for consideration and discussion, and invite all relevant stakeholders to respond to the information contained therein.
73. States parties’ obligations. In the light of States parties’ obligations under articles 4 and 19, inter alia, the Committee considers that resource constraints cannot provide a justification for a State party’s failure to take any, or enough, of the measures that are required for child protection. States parties are therefore urged to adopt comprehensive, strategic and time-bound coordinating frameworks for child caregiving and protection. In particular the Committee highlights the necessity to consult with children in the development of these strategies, frameworks and measures.
(a)Human resources: improved communication, cooperation and individual exchange within and between professional associations (for example medical, mental health, social work, legal, education, child maltreatment, academic/research, child rights and training organizations/institutions); improved communication and cooperation within and between civil society groups (for example research communities, NGOs, child-led organizations, faith-based organizations, organizations of persons with disabilities, community and youth groups, and individual experts involved in the development and exchange of knowledge and practice);
(b)Financial resources: improved coordination, monitoring and evaluation of donor aid; further development of financial and human capital analyses in order for economists, researchers and States parties to fully measure the costs of implementing holistic child protection systems (with an emphasis on primary prevention) versus the costs of managing the direct and indirect (including intergenerational) impact of violence at the individual, community, national and even international levels; and reviews by international financial institutions of “their policies and activities to take account of the impact they may have on children”;28
(c)Technical resources: evidence-based indicators, systems, models (including model legislation), tools, guidelines, protocols and practice standards for use by communities and professionals, with guidance on their adaptation to different contexts; a platform for systematic sharing and accessing of information (knowledge and practice); universally established clarity and transparency in budgeting for child rights and child protection, as well as in outcome monitoring of child protection during up and down cycles of economies and challenging circumstances (technical assistance should be established over time, through information, models and related training).
76.Regional and international cross-border cooperation. In addition to development assistance, cooperation is also needed to address child protection issues which cut across national borders such as: cross-border movement of children – either unaccompanied or with their families – either voluntarily or under duress (for example due to conflict, famine, natural disasters or epidemics) which can put children at risk of harm; cross-border trafficking of children for labour, sexual exploitation, adoption, removal of body parts or other purposes; conflict which cuts across borders and which may compromise a child’s safety and access to protection systems, even if the child remains in the country of origin; and disasters that impact several countries simultaneously. Specific legislation, policies, programmes and partnerships may be required to protect children affected by cross-border child protection issues (for example cybercrime and extraterritorial prosecution of those who sexually abuse children through travel and tourism and traffickers of families and children), whether these children are in traditional caregiving situations or where the State is the de facto caregiver, as in the case of unaccompanied children.
1 Report of the independent expert for the United Nations study on violence against children (A/61/299), para. 1.
2 Translations of the Convention into other languages do not necessarily include exact equivalents of the English term “violence”.
3 General Assembly resolution 64/142, annex.
4 See the Guidelines on Justice in Matters involving Child Victims and Witnesses of Crime (Economic and Social Council resolution 2005/20, annex).
5 See Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, independent expert for the United Nations Secretary-General’s study on violence against children, World Report on Violence against Children (Geneva, 2006),pp. 63-66.
6 States parties are also obliged to support caregivers to prevent accidents (art. 19 and art. 24, para. 2 (e)).
7 In many countries children are abandoned because parents and caregivers living in poverty do not have the means to support them. According to the definition, neglect is a failure of care when parents have the means to meet their children’s needs. The Committee has often urged States parties to “render appropriate assistance to parents and legal guardians in the performance of their child-rearing responsibilities” (art. 18, para. 2 of the Convention).
8 “Hazing” refers to rituals and other activities involving harassment, violence or humiliation which are used as a way of initiating a person into a group.
9 Sexual abuse comprises any sexual activities imposed by an adult on a child, against which the child is entitled to protection by criminal law. Sexual activities are also considered as abuse when committed against a child by another child, if the child offender is significantly older than the child victim or uses power, threat or other means of pressure. Sexual activities between children are not considered as sexual abuse if the children are older than the age limit defined by the State party for consensual sexual activities.
10 Information technologies such as the Internet and mobile phones have great potential as positive tools to help keep children safe and as a way to report suspected or actual violence or maltreatment. A protective environment needs to be created through regulation and monitoring of information technologies including empowering children to safely use these technologies.
11 Exposure to pornography can lead to an increase in child-on-child sexual abuse as children exposed to pornography “try out” what they have seen in practice with younger children or those to whom they have easy access and over whom they have control.
12 Adapted from a table developed by the EUKids Online project, cited in AUPs in Context: Establishing Safe and Responsible Online Behaviours (Becta, 2009), p. 6. See also the Rio de Janeiro Declaration and Call for Action to Prevent and Stop Sexual Exploitation of Children and Adolescents. Available from http://iiicongressomundial.net/congresso/arquivos/Rio%20Declaration%20and%20Call%20for%20Action%20-%20FINAL%20Version.pdf.
13 In line with the Committee’s previous recommendation to States parties to increase the age for marriage to 18 years for both girls and boys (general comment No. 4 (2003) on adolescent health and development in the context of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, para. 20), and given their specific vulnerability to maltreatment, the Committee considers that article 19 applies also to children under the age of 18 who have attained majority or emancipation through early marriage and/or forced marriage.
14 The United Nations study on violence against children describes settings in which violence against children occurs; see also the detailed guidance available in the Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children.
15 As defined in the Committee’s general comment No. 6 (2005), para. 7.
16 See in particular paras. 9 (range of measures required), 13 and 15 (regarding withdrawal and eligibility of reservations), and 66 and 67 (dissemination of the Convention).
17 In the context of “sanctions”, the term “perpetrators” excludes children who harm themselves. The treatment of children who harm other children must be educational and therapeutic.
18 See general comment No. 2, in particular paras. 1, 2, 4 and 19.
19 The detailed guidance available in the Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children should also be taken into account at each stage.
20 Human Rights Committee, general comment No. 17 (1989) on the rights of the child; European Court of Human Rights, Olsson vs. Sweden (No. 1), Judgement of 24 March 1988, Series A No. 130, para. 81; Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Velásquez Rodríguez vs. Honduras, Judgement on the Merits, 10 January 1989, Series C, No. 3, para. 172.
21 Paragraphs 48 ff can also be applied to processes in informal and customary systems of justice.
22 See also the Guidelines on Justice in Matters involving Child Victims and Witnesses of Crime.
23 See also: Guidelines of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on child friendly justice, adopted on 17 November 2010; Guidelines on Justice in Matters involving Child Victims and Witnesses of Crime; and General Assembly resolution 65/213.
24 See also the overarching recommendations of the independent expert for the United Nations study on violence against children (A/61/299), para. 96.
25 See also the Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children.
26 In some societies, in contrast to non-indigenous families, “neglect” as distinct from “abuse” is the primary reason leading to the removal of indigenous children from their families. Non-punitive family support services and interventions directly addressing causes (such as poverty, housing and historical circumstances) are often more appropriate. Specific efforts are required to address discrimination in the provision of services and the range of intervention options available to indigenous and other minority communities.
27 See general comment No. 5 (paras. 61, 62 and 64) on: the need for the mainstreaming of children’s rights into international cooperation and technical assistance; the need for such cooperation and assistance to be guided by, and to fully promote implementation of, the Convention; the allocation of a substantive part of international aid and assistance specifically to children; and the need for Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers and sector-wide approaches to development to include a strong focus on children’s rights.
28 A/61/299, para. 117.
資料來源:UN Treaty Body Database