/*********************************************** * Expandable Sticky Bar- (c) Dynamic Drive (www.dynamicdrive.com) * This notice MUST stay intact for legal use * Visit http://www.dynamicdrive.com/ for this script and 100s more. ***********************************************/ var mystickybar1=new expstickybar({settings})
 Old version
Home eSS Plug-in About Us Contact Us Login Register
eSocialSciences
Follow us on : eSocialSciences eSocialSciences
 
HAQ:Centre for Child Rights
HAQ: Centre for Child Rights works towards the recognition, promotion and protection of rights of all children. It aims to look at the child in an integrated manner within the framework of the Constitution of India, and the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child, which India ratified in 1992, and contribute to the building of an environment where every child’s rights are recognised and promoted without discrimination.

At HAQ, we believe that child rights and children’s concerns have to be mainstreamed into all developmental planning and action, and must also become a core developmental indicator.

HAQ believes that the State is the primary duty bearer in the realization of the rights of all children. Children’s rights must therefore become an integral component of good governance.


HAQ recognises that children vulnerable to neglect, violence, abuse and exploitation. Those children who have come in conflict with law are also most often those who have been neglected by society. All children need to grow up in a protective environment.


Therefore, the twin pillars of HAQ’s work are Children and Governance and Child Protection.


To carry forward its mandate, HAQ undertakes research and documentation. It is actively engaged in public education and advocacy on children’s rights. It also seeks to serve as a resource and support base for individuals and groups dealing with children at every level. It not only provides information and referral service but also training and capacity building of all those working with children or on issues concerning them, and the children themselves.

Besides developing skills for quick and incisive scanning of policy documents, commenting on them, creating database through documentation and research, this has necessitated working with existing networks, building of alliances, building partnership with other actors/stakeholders such as the bureaucrats, parliamentarians, judges and lawyers, police and media.
Contact Details >>
Address: 208, Shahpur Jat, New Delhi-1100491
Tel: 91-11-26673599
Fax: 91-11-26674688
Email ID: info@haqcrc.org
Website: http://www.haqcrc.org
Paper Type:
Union Budget 2018-19: Budget for Children in New India
India is currently going through a major demographic transition and it is this transition that is going to make India one of the world’s youngest countries with largest young population. Of this you...
Section:Briefs
by HAQ: Centre for Child Rights | Published On 03 Feb 2018
Restorative Care: Integral to Access to Justice
Existing research on “access to justice” has shown how the understanding of the term developed as the human rights approach gained ground. The conventional notion of access to justice was limited to s...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by HAQ: Centre for Child Rights | Published On 01 Jan 2018
Implementation of the POCSO Act: Goals, Gaps and Challenges
The study comes at a crucial time when key actors as well as the general public would like to know more about how effective is the implementation of the main law protecting children from sexual abus...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by Bharti Ali | Published On 01 Jan 2018
The Development of Global Responses to Child, Early and Forced Marriages
This report attempts to map the history of global responses to eradicate child marriage. However, child marriage is not an isolated issue, as it often encompasses early and forced marriages, though th...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by HAQ Centre for Child Rights HAQCRC | Published On 01 Aug 2017
Union Budget: A Window of Opportunity for Our Children?
In the context of social sector and particularly for children, the Union Budgets have disappointed the marginalized community and the Union Budget 2017-18 further pushed its children to the peripher...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by HAQ Centre for Child Rights HAQCRC | Published On 04 Feb 2017
Child Trafficking in India
Reports of raids in factories and workshops and rescue of children from different cities of the country appear with unfailing regularity. Children from disparate geographical regions: West Bengal, Bih...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by Enakshi Ganguly Thukral | Published On 01 Jun 2016
Locating the Processes of Policy Change in the Context of Anti-Rape and Domestic Worker Mobilisations in India
The report argues that state responses to women’s claims making provide a complex and variegated picture of a non-linear, slow, sporadic and contingent process of policy change, with iterations and re...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by Shraddha Chigateri | Published On 01 Apr 2016
How Protected are our Children in Assam?
Situation of children in Assam in 2016.
Section:Research/Project Reports
by Melvil Pereira | Published On 08 Mar 2016
Budget for Children 2016-2017: Not Even Halfway through its Demographic Dividend
The share of children in the Union Budget 2016-17 goes up to 3.32% showing a slight increase from 3.26% in the last years Budget 2015.
Section:General
by HAQ Centre for Child Rights HAQCRC | Published On 01 Mar 2016
Mainstreaming Children in the Union Budget 2016-17: The ‘Mantra’ of Inclusive Development
in order to ensure the inclusion and social security of children, the Central government must pay attention to the concerns raised by Sates and the upcoming Union Budget must include some of the point...
Section:Research/Project Reports
by Kumar Shailabh | Published On 01 Feb 2016
123456
eSS Column
eSS current affairs
All Rights Reserved(c) 2010 A Unit of IRIS Knowledge Foundation.
Developed & Maintained by IRIS