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Submission on the Green paper for Vulnerable Children [2012] NZHRCSub 2 (28 February 2012)

Last Updated: 31 May 2015

Human Rights Commission

Submission on the

Green Paper for Vulnerable Children

Logo PNG

28 February 2012

Contact person:

Jack Byrne

Senior Policy Analyst

Human Rights Commission

Direct dial 09 375 8647

Email: jackb@hrc.co.nz


  1. Introduction

1.1 Section 5 of the Human Rights Act 1993 (HRA) sets out the functions of the Human Rights Commission (the Commission). The Commission’s two primary functions in section 5(1) of the HRA are:

  1. to advocate and promote respect for, and an understanding and appreciation of, human rights in New Zealand society; and
  2. to encourage the maintenance and development of harmonious relations between individuals and among the diverse groups in New Zealand society.

1.2 The Commission welcomes the Green Paper as an opportunity to input to an important national human rights discussion about child protection and wellbeing. The Commission’s submission addresses key areas covered in the Green Paper and some particular issues in detail. It begins with the voices and input of children and young people who we consulted about the Green Paper.

1.3 In its work the Commission applies the six elements of the human rights-based approach as a conceptual basis for assessing policy and legislation. This approach was developed internationally and adapted for New Zealand by the Commission. Its six components are:

1.4 This approach directs policymakers to international human rights standards, how to balance what may appear to be conflicting rights, and the key underpinning concepts of participation, non-discrimination, empowerment and accountability.

1.5 The Commission’s submission draws heavily on the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCROC) including the guidance provided by the relevant United Nations Committee through its general comments and its specific recommendations to New Zealand. In doing so, the Commission strongly advocates for a strength-based child rights approach that acknowledges the rights and dignities of all children, not just those defined at any given point as vulnerable.

1.6 The Commission met with children and young people and youth workers and their voices open the submission, before it focuses specifically on three of the four sections in the Green Paper, namely Share Responsibility, Show Leadership and Make Child-Centred Policy.

  1. Children’s Voices


Participation

2.1 Participation is a fundamental component of a human rights based approach, and is one of the key underlying principles of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCROC). Article 12 of UNCROC states that:

  1. States Parties shall assure to the child who is capable of forming his or her own views the right to express those views freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of the child being given due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child.
  2. For this purpose, the child shall in particular be provided the opportunity to be heard in any judicial and administrative proceedings affecting the child, either directly, or through a representative or an appropriate body, in a manner consistent with the procedural rules of national law.

2.2 The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has stated that “child participation promotes child protection and child protection is key to participation”.[1] The Committee has emphasised that “children’s views must be invited and given due weight as a mandatory step at every point in a child protection process”.[2]

2.3 Further the Committee has noted that “the child’s right to be heard has particular relevance in situations of violence” and that “with regard to family and child-rearing, ...this right plays a preventive role against all forms of violence in the home and family”.[3]

2.4 To inform this submission, the Human Rights Commission used questions developed by the Office of the Children’s Commissioner and the Ministry of Social Development to ask children and young people for their views on issues raised in the Green Paper. The list of questions included “What makes a good childhood?” and “How should the Government support young people and their families?”

2.5 The Commission was aware of consultation being undertaken by the Office of the Children’s Commissioner and chose to complement that by focusing in particular on disabled, refugee and migrant children. In addition, the Commission translated a flyer into te reo Māori and circulated this through its networks.

2.6 Seven sessions were held involving 164 children and young people from the ages of 10 to 21. They included:

2.7 Many of the young people spoken to stressed their wish to be asked about their views and to have these listened to by adults.

Ask us!

Do more surveying to see what's best for children

Getting choices, instead of others deciding for us

Themes / responses

People who care about you

2.8 A clear theme to emerge from the feedback the Commission collected was the importance of family support. Love, kindness, care and respect from parents, family, neighbours, teachers and carers were seen as key to a good childhood, along with guidance, reasonable boundaries, discipline and help when needed.

2.9 Some children and young people also wanted greater freedom to try things for themselves – “let them make their own mistakes” – to do their own thing and be themselves. Space and respect for privacy were also mentioned with responses such as young people need “more freedom and trust”.

A caring family to love and guide you through life

Parental love and attention

Freedom with boundaries

Bend the rules a little but not much

Boundaries, punishment if you need it – but not stupid punishment

Time with parents

2.10 Spending quality time together and having focussed time and attention from parents were raised by many of the children and young people the Commission spoke to. Having fun and being able to play and do fun things were frequently seen as important aspects of childhood. Being able to enjoy being young was also noted – in contrast to the responsibilities that some young people have for looking after younger siblings.

Quality and quantity of time is what is needed.

Take them to the play ground, take them to watch a sports game, take them for a bike ride, a walk. Spend time with them. Do stuff kids want to do, kick a ball around. It is the little things in life, little memories.

If parents are on low income there could be support so parents can spend time with children and not have to work all the time.

Parents work too much.

2.11 The importance of positive role models was mentioned a number of times, particularly the influence of parents as role models, as well as the detrimental effects of witnessing bad behaviour from adults.

When you are young you are a sponge – so whatever is around you take it in, you copy a lot of things, what hurts is the little things.

A good neighbourhood = a good childhood. A good family = a good childhood. What your parents do will rub on to you.
Basic needs

2.12 Feedback highlighted the importance of basic necessities such as food, shelter, clothing, education and healthcare in order for children to thrive. Many responses identified money as an important issue, and concerns were raised about employment, adequate income, benefits and “not living in poverty, an adequate standard of living.” Young people also wanted better quality, secure housing and suggested:

Stop mildew in homes, warm up the houses

Stop kicking parents out of Housing NZ homes

2.13 Some young people wished for “lower living costs”, “lower food prices” and “lower school fees” or talked about the need to “remove financial pressures on parents.” There were indications that some young people also felt those pressures, having to care for siblings while parents worked, or themselves having to work to support the family.

2.14 Others highlighted the need to have the appropriate things required to participate at school, including good food and enough sleep. The essential role of education was mentioned numerous times by participants.

Give a kid a decent education and the world's their oyster

[Make sure] there is not a push to go straight to work after high school because the family is supported financially



Inclusion

2.15 Inclusion was particularly highlighted by young people with intellectual disabilities who the Commission met. A particularly poignant comment from one disabled young person with a significant impairment was: “[It’s] good when people say hi and I can say hi back.”

Sometimes mainstream kids make us feel left out. We have to change ourselves so they would get to know you – it is devastating.

Safety

2.16 Many disabled young people talked about bullying, and the need for support for people who experienced it, particularly at school.

2.17 Other young people also raised the issue of safety at school or at home and the detrimental impact of violence on their lives. Witnessing violence or arguments amongst parents or other family members was also mentioned.

Make sure we are safe at all times.

No domestics

Not getting hidings

2.18 Discussion about government agencies sharing information usually came up in relation to issues of safety. Young people typically felt that in those circumstances it was appropriate for information about them to be shared. However some felt older children should have the opportunity to talk about whether or not their information could be kept confidential.

[The government should help] if we are scared, for safety reasons.

If you need to talk [to others] you should ask us first, especially if we are over a certain age.

Suggestions

Support parents’ income so young people don’t have to

2.19 Young people were asked how the government could help them do well and support them and their families. Their suggestions included various forms of financial assistance either directly to families, or by funding community projects and activities including youth networking and youth advocates.

2.20 Young people were able to identify people and groups outside their family who they could contact if they needed support. Some specifically said this community support should be better valued.

Support communities’ strengths so they can become strong.

Recognise volunteer work that the community does.

2.21 Investing in education was a top priority. Suggestions included ensuring primary and secondary education is actually free, better funding for schools including those outside the mainstream education system and for technology such as laptops. Young people also suggested better access to tertiary student loans and higher student allowances.

2.22 Children and young people identified counsellors and social workers as important sources of support. They asked for greater ethnic diversity of counsellors and suggested social workers should be available to check on children who may have trouble at home. Advice and support about how to find employment was another identified need.

2.23 Parenting education was raised by many of the young people, particularly for young teen parents. This included providing information about “what it takes to raise a child to be healthy and responsible” and “on understanding child welfare.” They thought parents needed to be “made aware of what the rules are in this country (smacking etc).”

  1. Overview of International Human Rights Framework

3.1 The international human rights standards around the rights of children are set out most comprehensively in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCROC) which is summarised in Appendix 1. Specific obligations in relation to disabled children are in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). The rights of children and young people are a fundamental component of both of the core International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). New Zealand is bound by these provisions, having ratified these covenants and conventions, and is required to regularly report to the United Nations on steps taken to realise these obligations.[4]

3.2 The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP) provides valuable guidance about measures required to realise the human rights of Māori children. Whilst the declaration itself is not binding, many of the provisions reflect obligations set out in ratified conventions or covenants. Others are aspirational.

3.3 This submission draws on guidance from United Nations treaty bodies, particularly guidance from the Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC). This is expressed in the Committee’s general comments and its 2011 concluding observations in response to New Zealand’s periodic reports against its UNCROC commitments. The Committee’s most recent recommendations to New Zealand in 2011 are attached as Appendix 2.

3.4 The key international and domestic human rights standards of relevance to the Green Paper include:

3.5 The 2011 Concluding Observations from the CRC and the priority areas in the Commission’s report Human Rights in NZ 2010 clearly identify significant challenges in realising both children’s rights generally, and the rights of those groups of children most likely to be disadvantaged by structural discrimination. This balance between universal rights and special measures is evident in the CRC’s recommendations that New Zealand ensure full protection against discrimination on any grounds, including by:

  1. Taking urgent measures to address disparities in access to services of Maori children and their families
  2. Strengthening its awareness-raising and other preventive activities against discrimination and, if necessary, taking affirmative action for the benefit of children in vulnerable situations, such as Maori and Pacific children, refugee children, migrant children, children with disabilities and lesbian, bisexual, gay and transgender children and children living with persons from these groups.[11]

3.6 The Commission suggests that the Green Paper’s focus on ‘vulnerable children’ should be balanced with a strengths-based child rights approach. Otherwise it risks reinforcing deficit-models criticised by many, including Māori. Such a strengths-based approach has been taken in Australia’s National Framework for Protecting Australian Children 2009-2020. This reflects a public health approach which interprets child protection widely and avoids reducing it to an issue of simply responding to abuse and neglect.

3.7 This challenge is particularly relevant to considering the rights of disabled children who are too often defined by their specific health needs or diagnosis rather than their inherent dignity, individual autonomy and abilities.

  1. Response to Green Paper’s Section A: Share responsibility

4.1 The Commission welcomes a review and discussion about the balance between parental and community responsibility for care and child protection. UNCROC specifically addresses the relationship between a child’s rights and those of parents and extended family. Article 5 states:

States parties shall respect the responsibilities, rights and duties of parents or, where applicable, the members of the extended family or community as provided for by local custom, legal guardians or other persons legally responsible for the child, to provide, in a manner consistent with the evolving capacities of the child, appropriate direction and guidance in the exercise by the child of rights recognised in the present Convention.

4.2 In other words, a parent’s direction and guidance must still be within the context of realising the child’s rights as set out in UNCROC.

4.3 UNCROC prioritises the role of the family in children’s growth and wellbeing and consequently obligates the Government to prioritise family support in its economic and social policies and expenditure. In its General Comment No 13, the Committee on the Rights of the Child suggests a range of social policy measures to prevent abuse of children and support the care of children on a universalised basis, including:

4.4 A key finding of the Commission’s review of Human Rights in New Zealand 2010 was the need to develop and maintain initiatives that support families. In its examination of New Zealand in 2011, the CRC expressed concern that “families in some population subgroups lack adequate assistance in the performance of their child-rearing responsibilities, and notably those families in a crisis situation due to poverty, alcohol, drugs or isolation” (para 30). Likewise, children identified the pressures and hardship that “not having money” can have on their parents in their feedback to the Commission’s consultation about the Green Paper.

4.5 Poverty reduction and addressing systemic inequality are therefore critical components of any strategy to support parenting and ensure child wellbeing and safety. There is opportunity for this to be addressed in the reviews and reforms currently underway in relation to welfare, employment and tax reform.

4.6 The Commission supports a mix of preventive and proactive measures and secondary and tertiary interventions to support quality parenting and community involvement in child protection. These should be strengths-based and resilience focused.

4.7 Positive initiatives currently in place include the Early Childhood Education (ECE) subsidy for children over three and children under two who are in State care, and provision of disability assistance to parents and caregivers through the social security and health systems. However, in its concluding observations, the CRC recommended that the Government consider extending the ECE subsidy and that more provision be made for temporary and after-school care.

4.8 The Green Paper asks whether government has got the balance right in supporting parents, caregivers, family and whānau to meet their responsibilities while also protecting the needs of vulnerable children. The sections below look at some specific challenges and opportunities that arise in relation to Māori whānau, disabled children and their families, and children and young people in the care of the state.

Māori to determine support

4.9 Norms and values relating to child-rearing and caring are culturally constructed. For family and parental support to be relevant to Māori it is therefore important that it reflect and be targeted at what Māori consider as appropriate measures of wellbeing for their tamariki. Māori indicators to measure progress have been explored in Māori research including:

4.10 The current Inquiry into the Māori determinants of child wellbeing provides an invaluable opportunity to progress development of Māori determined measures of child wellbeing, which should then be used to inform the development and delivery of parenting strategies. The CRC has also identified the need for data collection in relation to indigenous children and families, particularly those involved in the statutory and tertiary system, for the purpose of informing and continuously improving policy and service development. The Committee recommended that “governments in cooperation with indigenous families and communities, . . . collect data on the family situation of indigenous children, including children in foster care and adoption processes.”[12]
Disabled children and young people

4.11 Article 7 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) recognises the rights of disabled children to special protection, and also emphasises the need to ensure disabled children’s full enjoyment of their human rights on an equal basis with other children.

4.12 Disabled people’s, including disabled children’s, resilience depends significantly on how well they integrate the experience of impairment, as positively as possible, into their identity. Disability awareness training, delivered from a strength-based perspective, can be critical if those working with disabled people are to foster rather than undermine this resilience.

4.13 Article 23 of the CRPD is particularly important when care issues arise for disabled children. It emphasises the measures needed to realise disabled children’s right to family life. These include providing “early and comprehensive information, services and support to disabled children and their families”.[13] Early co-ordinated family support systems are vital in order to maintain disabled children and young people’s connections to immediate and extended family and to their wider community. Without such support there is a real danger of undermining not only a disabled child’s right to family life but the realisation of many other rights in the CRPD.

4.14 Flexible support options are needed to ensure that the whole family, including the disabled child, remain connected. The breakdown of family relationships has a potentially huge long-term impact on disabled children and young people. In those instances where the immediate family is unable to care for a disabled child, every effort should be made to “provide alternative care within the wider family, and failing that, within the community in a family setting.”[14]

4.15 A 2006 independent review of the interface between disability and care and protection services, Best of Care[15] addressed these issues. It identified the need for a consistent approach across the Children, Young Persons and their Families (CYPF) Act so that the child’s best interests are considered and all options are explored, and therefore out of home placement is not a foregone conclusion for disabled children. The review also refers to the need for improved access to disability support services and “tackling the bigger issues, like access to alternate caregivers, which in practice have significant consequences for children and young people with disabilities and their families.”[16]

4.16 In its 2008 submission on the Children, Young Persons and their Families Amendment (No 6) Bill, the Commission supported the Bill’s additional requirements that:

4.17 This Bill has not progressed through the House. The Green Paper provides an opportunity to assess whether and to what extent its requirements are implemented in practice and any outstanding legislative change required to ensure that the rights of disabled children under the CRPD are better realised in the CYPF Act.[17]

Children in state care

4.18 Children in state care are widely acknowledged as a highly vulnerable group, reflected in a range of social outcome data spanning mental health, education, criminal justice and income levels. The CRC’s most recent 2011 General Comment 13, on the right of the child to freedom from all forms of violence, acknowledges the “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”.[18] At the same time, many children in care are highly resilient and subsequently achieve positive life outcomes.

4.19 The Commission considers that the CYPF Act 1989 establishes the right balance between family and state involvement where care and protection issues arise. However, stronger protections and obligations should be inserted into the Act to guide the level of care provided by the State when children enter its care. These should reflect UNCROC obligations in particular, Article 20 which sets out particular requirements to realise the rights of children in care and protection:

  1. A child temporarily or permanently deprived of his or her family environment, or in whose own best interests cannot be allowed to remain in that environment, shall be entitled to special protection and assistance provided by the State.
  2. States parties shall in accordance with their national laws ensure alternative care for such a child.
  3. Such care could include, inter alia, foster placement, kafalah of Islamic law, adoption or if necessary placement in suitable institutions for the care of children. When considering solutions, due regard should be given to the desirability of continuity in a child’s upbringing and to the child’s ethnic, religious, cultural and linguistic background.

4.20 Article 9 of UNCROC sets out a child’s right to not be separated from his or her parents against their will, except where competent authorities, subject to a judicial review, determine such a separation is in the best interests of the child. Areas requiring specific redress through legislative amendment, policy and practice change include the following:

4.21 Given the high proportion of indigenous children, including tamariki Māori, in state care, the Committee on the Rights of the child has highlighted the need for governments, “in cooperation with indigenous families and communities, to collect data on the family situation of indigenous children, including children in foster care and adoption processes.”[20] The Commission suggests that this could be achieved as part of the Children’s Action Plan. This information should be used to design policies relating to the family environment and alternative care of indigenous children in a culturally sensitive way.

4.22 Proposed changes through the Children, Young Persons and their Families Amendment Bill (No 6) (2007) would have improved legal protections for children in state care. In addition the bill would have extended the protection measures under the CYPF Act to include 17-year-olds, thereby bringing the legislation into line with UNCROC and implementing specific recommendations of the CRC[21] and the Committee Against Torture.[22] The Commission urges that consideration be given to progressing outstanding proposals set out in the Bill.

Child protection as a Community Issue

4.23 The Commission welcomes the focus in this section of the Green Paper on making and promoting child protection a community issue. However, the concept of ‘community’ is fluid and context specific. It includes, for example, neighbourhoods, school and employment relationships and sports teams.

4.24 To date, there has been a tendency to focus parenting support around the delivery of health, education and social services. Yet there is further potential to engage with and use workplace and sport ‘communities’ as part of a proactive parenting support strategy. There are many community-grown examples of this including through sporting codes such as waka ama that have grown out of Māori communities and traditions. Sports clubs could use the opportunities and techniques of sport to strengthen parent-child attachments and resilience.

4.25 Worksites also provide an invaluable opportunity to support men in their fathering of children through positive messaging. At a broader level, parenting can be supported at work with flexible work arrangements and by enabling and normalising access to parenting information and support services in the workplace. Incentives could be provided for work-based childcare facilities.

  1. Response to Green Paper’s Section B: Show leadership

5.1 In this section, the Commission expresses its support for the development of a Children’s Action Plan as part of a broader coordinated national strategy to address child protection and wellbeing.

The need for a coordinated approach

5.2 The Commission supports the need for a committed and coordinated approach to child protection. As the Green Paper describes, there is currently “no national common goal or framework to unite child-focussed work” in New Zealand. The need for this type of mechanism to ensure that children’s rights and views are systemically incorporated in legislation and policy development was highlighted in Human Rights in NZ 2010.

5.3 The Commission’s position is that an action plan is necessary but on its own is not sufficient. This is based both on lessons learnt from past New Zealand attempts to implement national plans of action, and international experience.

5.4 In 2002 the then New Zealand Government committed to the Agenda for Children / Mahere rautaki mā te Hunga Tamariki – Making life better for children.[23] In its June 2010 Alternative Periodic Report to the CRC, Action for Children and Youth Aotearoa (ACYA) pinpointed why the strategy, which ACYA had strongly welcomed, had not succeeded. These were predominantly because it had not detailed any specific actions to attain the goals set out in each of the Action Areas and nor had it set timelines or allocated responsibilities. ACYA concluded “the Agenda was merely a statement of general principles and its lack of implementation by government agencies reflects this.”[24]

5.5 Similarly the Public Health Advisory Committee, which provides the Minister of Health with independent advice on public health issues, has stressed that more coordinated intervention is necessary. In its May 2010 report The Best Start in Life: Achieving effective action on child health and wellbeing, the Committee proposed to the Minister of Health that the Government consider four major improvements for children:[25]

5.6 The CRC in its General Comment 13 has also raised concerns about the potential limitations of national plans of action if they are not part of a broader coordinating framework:[26]

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.

5.7 Therefore it is not surprising that the Committee’s 2011 concluding observations and recommendations to the New Zealand government specifically addressed this issue by:

Core components of an action plan

5.8 The Commission agrees that it is crucial that a Children’s Action Plan exists within a broader coordinating framework that specifies required outcomes, measures and milestones to ensure progress on the key issues identified by the Committee - poverty, inequality and underachievement. Any single measure alone, including levels of expenditure, is insufficient to assess the impact of services on outcomes for children. Hence there is a need for a range of evidence-based indicators and measures.

5.9 The Commission recommends that accountability should rest with Chief Executives of relevant government agencies, who should be required to report annually against these targets. In order to strengthen these obligations, the Commission further recommends that these requirements are set out in binding legislation, such as a Children’s Act.

5.10 The Plan should reflect New Zealand’s commitment to UNCROC – focusing on children’s universal, indivisible and inalienable rights and provision for special measures to achieve equality and non-discrimination for children who face disadvantage. It could require child impact assessments of Cabinet papers and Bills or use another mechanism to ensure all policy and legislation has considered the potential impact on children.

5.11 In this regard, the Action Plan should incorporate specific targets to remove the structural barriers that disadvantage specific groups of children and young people. This includes setting out child poverty reduction targets. Much can be learnt from the Ontario Government’s 2008 poverty reduction strategy,[27] reinforced by the Poverty Reduction Act passed in May 2009 with unanimous consent from all parties. It requires successive governments to:

5.12 The strategy’s 2011 annual report provides the first data on its effectiveness and shows the number of children in poverty decreased by over four per cent (or 20,000) children between 2008 and 2009. This improvement occurred despite the global recession and in contrast to rising child poverty rates in other parts of Canada.[28]

5.13 In addition, the Commission strongly supports specific indicators, measures and targets for specific groups of children vulnerable to structural discrimination or disadvantage. These should focus on measures that foster greater understanding of resilience, wellbeing and the full realisation of a child’s right to self-determination.




Need for positive focus

5.14 The Commission considers it crucial that a co-ordinating framework and Child Action Plan be strengths-based and focused on resilience. This will require ensuring that children and young people, public, private, non-government and iwi sectors are involved in developing and owning such an Action Plan.

5.15 In its General Comment 13 the CRC defines such a child rights approach including that:

Outcome indicators should focus on the child’s positive development and well-being as a rights-bearing person, beyond a purely narrow focus on incidence, prevalence and types or extent of violence . . . 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.”[29]

5.16 A range of researchers, practitioners, and the Commissioner for Children have proposed that a public health approach to child protection will deliver better outcomes for children, young people and their families (Holzer 2007; O’Donnell, Scott, & Stanley 2008; and Scott 2006).[30] The components of this approach are set out below:

Under a public health model, priority is placed on having universal supports available for all families (for example, health and education). More intensive (secondary) prevention interventions are provided to those families that need additional assistance with a focus on early intervention. Tertiary child protection services are a last resort, and the least desirable option for families and governments.

5.17 The Commission would therefore support a ‘tiered’ Action Plan with universalised access to health, education and support services provided to all children and families. This would be coupled with a cross- agency commitment to monitor and engage with children and families in the early years for the purpose of supporting every aspect of a child’s development (see the section on Child Centred Policy below for more details).

Working with whānau, hapū, iwi and Māori leaders

5.18 In a February 2011 report, the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous People noted the “extreme disadvantage in the social and economic conditions of Māori people in comparison to the rest of New Zealand society” and the need for action to ensure that Māori and non-Māori New Zealanders could “move forward as true partners in the future, as contemplated by the Treaty of Waitangi”.[31]

5.19 Working in partnership with iwi, hapū and whānau in order to protect the rights of tamariki Māori is an obligation on the Crown under the Treaty of Waitangi and UNCROC.

5.20 UNCROC was the first core human rights treaty to include specific references to indigenous children in a number of its provision (articles 17, 29 and 30). In 2009 the Committee on the Rights of the Child produced its General Comment 11: Indigenous children and their rights under the Convention. It emphasised that the Convention’s specific references to indigenous children recognise that “they require special measures in order to fully enjoy their rights.”[32] The Committee stated that:

When State authorities including legislative bodies seek to assess the best interests of an indigenous child, they should consider the cultural rights of the indigenous child and his or her need to exercise such rights collectively with members of their group. As regards legislation, policies and programmes that affect indigenous children in general, the indigenous community should be consulted and given an opportunity to participate in the process on how the best interests of indigenous children in general can be decided in a culturally sensitive way. Such consultations should, to the extent possible, include meaningful participation of indigenous children.[33]

5.21 The Committee’s general comment emphasises the need for States to work with indigenous peoples, to ensure their meaningful participation in decisions that affect their lives.[34] It clarifies that article 5, which focuses on respecting the rights, responsibilities and duties of parents, requires ensuring “effective measures are implemented to safeguard the integrity of indigenous families and communities by assisting them in their child-rearing responsibilities.”[35] This accords with articles 3, 5, 18, 25 and 27(3) of UNCROC.

5.22 Given the disproportionate representation of Māori in the care and protection and youth justice systems, the Commission suggests that partnership and improving the lives and wellbeing of Māori children and whānau must be top priorities for a Children’s Action Plan. In addition it is likely that Māori children are over-represented within the 20,000 children who have parent/s currently in jail.

5.23 The Commission recognises that there are many instances of Crown and tangata whenua working constructively together. In the child protection area, Puao te ata tu has demonstrated the value of Māori-led initiatives, whilst there is growing interest in the potential of Whānau Ora.

5.24 New Zealand research has identified factors that, if addressed, would facilitate the success of Māori and Pacific providers. In 2002, the University of Auckland’s International Research Institute for Māori and Indigenous Peoples[36] affirmed and built upon the recommendations of the Community and Voluntary Sector Working Party’s 2001 report,[37] including:

5.25 The Convention on the Rights of the Child and General Comments from the Committee on the Rights of the Child also recommended:

  1. Response to Green Paper’s Section C: Make child-centred policy changes

6.1 This part of the Commission’s submission addresses issues raised in the Green Paper concerning Child-Centred Policy Changes. Part 1 focuses on policy around the funding of services including targeting. Part 2 addresses information sharing and mandatory reporting and puts forward some specific proposals.

6.2 The principle of the “first call for children” was promoted at the World Summit for Children in 1990, a year after UNCROC was adopted. Both the first-call principle and article 4 of the Convention emphasise that limited financial resources cannot be used as a justification for neglecting to put in place appropriate measures to implement children’s rights. Whatever their economic circumstances, countries are required to undertake all possible measures towards the realisation of the rights of the child, making the maximum use of their available resources and paying special attention to the most disadvantaged groups.[40]

6.3 The concept of progressive universalism has emerged internationally within both United Nations’ agencies and policymakers. Its first tier is universal provision of services, supplemented by additional services targeted to those with higher levels of need. Progressive universalism has explicitly been identified as an essential step to reduce inequalities.[41] In other instances it has developed in response to the global financial crisis[42] where it is advocated that higher levels of social security should be introduced as economies develop and the fiscal space for redistributive policies widens.

6.4 The Human Rights Commission supports the position of the Office of the Children’s Commissioner (OCC) that there are many instances where universal provision remains the most effective approach. Examples cited by OCC include where poor outcomes are widely spread, there are economies of scale and where targeted approaches alone may stigmatise children and their families. Universal services also provide an effective way of screening and identifying children at risk who require additional support.

Service provision – prevention, early intervention and treatment

6.5 Funding should be directed across the spectrum of primary, secondary and tertiary services so that every child has access to necessary support and no child is left behind. The CRC in its General Comment No. 13 (2011) has stated:

The Committee emphasizes in the strongest terms that child protection must begin with proactive prevention of all forms of violence as well as explicitly prohibit all forms of violence....Emphasis on general (primary) and targeted (secondary) prevention must remain paramount at all times in the development and implementation of child protection systems. (para 18)

6.6 Primary prevention strategies promote community awareness and responsibility for child safety and wellbeing. They have been shown to be more effective in addressing the issue of neglect than strategies which rest on risk screening.[43]

6.7 There is a correlation between neighbourhood deprivation and child abuse notification rates.[44] The best strategies for preventing neglect are therefore those aimed at enhancing social and economic wellbeing, promoting non-violent cultural and social norms and providing quality healthcare and childcare. Evidence shows these are more successful than strategies aimed solely at preventing re-occurrence of neglect.

Early intervention and targeting

6.8 The Commission supports government spending on early intervention particularly in terms of children’s early developmental years. Every child has a right to be supported and enabled throughout development to adulthood. Evidence indicates the early years as particularly crucial to positive life outcomes and the Commission supports this reflected in service provision investment.

6.9 There are potential lessons for New Zealand in the early intervention initiative ‘Chile Grows with You.’[45] The model was rolled out in Chile three years before its major earthquake in 2010 and has been pivotal to addressing children’s needs in the earthquake aftermath.

6.10 ‘Chile Grows with You’ is a coordinated programme involving key government social service agencies such as the Ministries of Health, Justice, Labour and Education. The programme provides universal access to maternal care, education, health and social services. It involves monitoring all aspects of a child’s development and any parenting risks, for example, depression, addiction, isolation and attachment issues for the purpose of intervening early to address risk. Potential interventions include one to one education, regular home-visiting, supporting engagement in parenting programmes and programme delivery. The expectation is that every child and family is provided with a service in the early years. Additional services are provided to those assessed as most vulnerable by reference to a range of dynamic and static risk factors including age, family income, drug and alcohol use, living conditions and disability of family members.

6.11 In New Zealand, the current ante-natal and post-natal system of lead maternity care followed up by Well Child / Tamariki Ora health checks is a foundation for such an approach here. As with the lead maternity care system, families could exercise choice about a lead service that they wish to engage with for ongoing monitoring and support purposes. The benefits of the system would include that it:

Watching out for children / monitoring

6.12 The Commission supports agencies working together to protect children from harm and abuse and proposes that agencies be required by legislation to work collaboratively together. This should involve mandated change to allow agencies to share and collect information about clients. Safeguards and guiding principles must be established. To optimise opportunities to provide the highest quality, integrated services to children and families, information technology change would also be required.

Information sharing

6.13 The Commission sets out its position below supporting the introduction of a regulatory code to enable information sharing and collecting by agencies working with children and families. The regulation could be by means of legislation, development of a Code of Practice under the Privacy Act or as “sharing programme” if the Law Commission’s proposed changes to privacy legislation are progressed. The Commission’s position has been informed by a consideration of relevant rights and ethical concerns, an acceptance that the current regulatory framework does not enable a sufficiently child-focused approach to information-sharing and through research into information-sharing regimes established in other jurisdictions.

Relevant rights

6.14 The issue of information-sharing and collection is an important one. It has arisen in a number of child death inquiries including the most recent Ministerial Inquiry into a case of serious child abuse.[46] Barriers to information sharing are frequently a frustration for families seeking services for their children, particularly for parents of children with disabilities who want relevant information to be collected and shared freely amongst agencies so they can access services in a timely and relevant way.

6.15 Information-sharing raises a range of human rights and ethical concerns including:

6.16 As provided in Article 3 of UNCROC, the overriding factor must be the best interests of the child.

6.17 Whether information sharing will impact positively on children depends largely on the quality of the information that is collected and the extent to which it can be readily accessed by other agencies. Children can end up being denied the best and most relevant service response because agencies haven’t collected the right information, for example, information about disability or a child’s cultural affiliation or can’t access the information that has been collected by other agencies.

6.18 Having weighed up these factors, the Commission supports the introduction of regulatory code enabling Government and relevant non-government agencies to collect and share information for the purpose of children’s protection and wellbeing. This would need to be supported by widespread training of agency staff and by information technology changes that facilitate information access and exchange between agencies.

Current framework

6.19 The current framework for information sharing in relation to child protection and welfare involves a range of legislative and policy provisions and protocols. For example, the Privacy Act 1993 allows the sharing of personal information without consent in limited circumstances. Most relevantly, Principle 11 allows information to be shared to avoid prejudice to the maintenance of the law by any public sector agency including for the purpose of preventing, detecting, investigating, prosecuting and punishing offences and to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat to the life or health of an individual.

6.20 The Children, Young Persons and their Families (CYPF) Act 1989 is also relevant. It has a number of provisions prohibiting disclosure of personal information. In relation to the Ministry’s care and protection functions, section 66 of the Act enables CYF to require any government department, Crown agency or statutory body to provide information relating to a child for certain purposes and prohibits disclosure of the provided information.

6.21 Provisions in other legislation (for example section 22C of the Health Act 1956) professional ethical codes and Memorandums of Understanding also apply. The Commission is aware that a range of interagency forums operate within this framework in areas of youth justice, child protection and education including Rock-On forums, Police child offender case management meetings and Education Intersector forums. These aim to provide joined-up responses to children and families in need and should be supported by a clear regulatory mandate that includes privacy safeguards.


Need for child-focus to information sharing

6.22 The Commission supports the introduction of a comprehensive regulatory scheme that is clearly founded on and will facilitate the interests and rights of a child.

6.23 More will be required than the proposed amendments in the Privacy Information Amendment Bill which removes the current requirement for a threat to be imminent for personal information to be disclosed and will allow disclosure when there is a serious threat to public health or safety or to the health of a person. The Commission favours the introduction of a two-tiered approach to information sharing similar to that taken in New South Wales.

6.24 The first tier would allow, without requiring, relevant agencies to share information on the basis it is reasonably believed to assist and promote a child’s safety and wellbeing. The information could include assessments, information about services currently and previously engaged, and risk and protective factors. Sharing could be facilitated through data sharing. Relevant agencies would include those who deal with children, young people and their families and in particular, members of the police, education, health and justice sectors as well as those delivering child and family services in the non-government sector.

6.25 The second tier would relate specifically to the exchange of information by and to Child Youth and Family (CYF). This recognises the legitimacy of CYF having greater access to information, and the additional safeguards that this requires. Given the highly sensitive nature of the information CYF holds, the consequent harm that release of the information can cause and the agency’s tertiary role in serious child abuse cases, CYF should be authorised to release information in carefully circumscribed circumstances to assist other agencies to address children’s wellbeing. For example, relevant information should be provided to schools to assist them to develop Individual Education Plans and to non-government agencies to enable them to work effectively with CYF clients. CYF should continue to be able to request and receive information from relevant agencies for the purpose of undertaking its assessment, investigation, intervention and care responsibilities and there should continue to be a consequent obligation on requested agencies to supply the information.

6.26 The Commission acknowledges the public concern about over-intrusion by the State which information-sharing and information collection can invoke. The legislation or other chosen regulatory regime should therefore state clearly that the intent of enabling information-sharing between agencies is to achieve the most relevant and quality responses to children and families. It should also include safeguards.

Risks

6.27 There are risks associated with enabling more information sharing by agencies. Information sharing impacts on the right to access confidential services, which is an important therapeutic and ethical principle in service delivery. Confidentiality supports a person’s right to be self-determining and is a core component of trust-building between professional and client. Research indicates that people, including young people, value confidentiality and will withhold information and curtail their involvement with services when confidentiality cannot be assured.[48] If families and young people are deterred from seeking help, this could exacerbate existing risk or deter families from taking action to pre-empt risk.

6.28 Information-sharing between agencies also carries the risk of stigmatising and stereotyping children and families with the associated risk that possibilities are shut off to children. This is a particularly acute risk for children with disabilities. Medical approaches towards disability tend to be deficit focused. In an information-sharing regime medical approaches are likely to be given weight and could stymie the voices and possibilities that would otherwise be open to disabled children and their families through a positive and inclusive approach to disability.

6.29 Lastly, there is the risk that more information sharing between agencies will contribute to a professional and agency-driven culture in the child protection area. This will be at the cost of supporting and empowering children and families which, in the long term, is essential for families to adequately care for and protect their children.


Safeguards

6.30 To mitigate these and other risks, the Commission suggests that the new information-sharing regulatory regime incorporate safeguards such as the following:


Mandating reporting by professionals

6.31 The issue of whether professionals working with children and families should be required to report suspicions of harm has long been contentious. To date, NEW ZEALAND like Denmark, the United Kingdom and Ireland has preferred a voluntary reporting regime that allows but does not require professionals to report suspicions of harm. By contrast, the USA and most Australian jurisdictions have enacted an obligation to report. This difference in approach has created an opportunity to learn and gain from overseas experience.

6.32 The Commission considers that the issue of mandatory reporting should be determined within the overarching goal of achieving a child protection system that has access to information necessary for both its harm prevention and intervention roles. It also considers that different approaches should be taken to reporting in cases of adult/child abuse compared to cases of violence, abuse and bullying at schools. Below, the Commission considers and makes proposals first in relation to adult/child abuse. It then addresses reporting and response to violence and abuse of children by peers.


Mandatory Reporting in context of adult/child abuse

Overseas learning

6.33 The Commission has considered the benefits of imposing mandatory reporting through legislation alongside the potential harms. The benefits most often cited are that a legislated obligation to report will mean that all professionals are clearer about their duty when they suspect a risk of harm to a child; and notifications will be able to be followed up more quickly, enabling more effective early intervention and prevention.

6.34 Both these benefits however ultimately rest on an assumption that reports of harm are met by an appropriate and timely response. Yet this is not borne out in overseas experience or in New Zealand itself. Overseas data from mandatory reporting regimes show that there continues to be a significant discrepancy between reporting rates and subsequent follow-up.[49] The discrepancy also exists in voluntary reporting regimes. For example, in New Zealand less than half of neglect notifications were upheld by CYF in 2009.[50]

6.35 There is no evidence to indicate that mandatory reporting regimes have resulted in greater safety for children than voluntary systems. Evidence indicates that in both types of reporting regimes, child abuse that warrants statutory intervention continues to be under-reported. In mandatory systems, this is despite penalties having been imposed for failure to report.

6.36 The potential harms of mandatory reporting are that statutory agencies become over-burdened and ultimately compromised in their ability to respond to children and families in need. More particularly, the harm in New Zealand is that CYF will become focused on ‘processing’ reports of harm to the extent that it will be unable to respond to them in a timely and thorough way and resourcing will be diverted away from its work with vulnerable children, namely children in, or at risk of, entering State care.

6.37 Other risks are that mandatory reporting, like information-sharing, undermines trust between professionals and their clients and reduces the level of ongoing help a client seeks. Mandatory reporting could contribute to a net-widening of state involvement compounding the over-representation of Māori and Pacific Island children in the child protection system. Lastly, there is the risk that an obligation to report to CYF or Police promotes a narrow view of child protection as a ‘statutory issue’ rather than promoting wider community ownership and recognition of the dynamic and rich wealth of expertise in the community to deal with child abuse.


Commission proposal – duty of care approach

6.38 The Commission affirms and reinforces the Green Paper position that child protection is a community-wide issue and the need to ensure delivery of a child-centred response when risk of harm exists. On this basis, the Commission favours a duty of care approach to reporting risk of harm.

6.39 Legislation should spell out that child protection is a community-wide issue and that all professionals have a duty to respond appropriately. In cases where serious or imminent harm is suspected the legislation should specify that this duty includes notifying CYF or Police. In all other cases, the legislation should direct that the duty entails, at minimum, a referral to an appropriate service provider. This may or may not be CYF and could be an iwi social service, or collaborative case management forum such as Rock-On.

6.40 The benefits of this proposal are that it:

6.41 This proposal is also consistent with the move in New Zealand and overseas jurisdictions to promote wider community involvement in child protection. It complements CYF’s Differential Response model that enables reports of harm to be dealt with by the NGO sector at different points of the decision-making processes.




Mandatory reporting and response to violence, abuse and bullying in schools

6.42 This final section of the Commission’s submission covers peer to peer violence, abuse and bullying in schools. The Commission proposes that a different approach be taken to reporting and responding to violence, abuse or bullying when the perpetrator is another child or young person, rather than an adult. For ease of reading, this section sometimes uses the word bullying as a generic umbrella term to also encompass peer to peer violence and abuse.

6.43 Bullying is pervasive in New Zealand schools and has serious and often life-long effects. Yet, it tends to be under-reported and tolerated. The current legislative scheme has failed to stem bullying. The Commission therefore proposes that legislation be enacted to require schools to:

6.44 This approach is consistent with and builds on the recent suggestions made by the Office of the Ombudsmen, including that a national requirement that schools implement anti-bullying programmes.[52]

Effects of Bullying and violence

6.45 Bullying can involve threat to life and serious physical injury. The effect on victims can include living with anxiety and fear, lowered self-esteem, engagement in risk -taking behaviours such as substance abuse, self-harming, truanting and dropping- out from school, all with associated long term adverse impacts. Victims may suffer mental health issues including suicidal ideation, relationship difficulties and impeded emotional, behavioural and cognitive development.[53]

6.46 Bullying impacts adversely on perpetrators. It may to lead to suspension from schools, increased absenteeism and dropping out from schooling. If bullying and harassment are not dealt with by schools, the use of aggression by perpetrators is reinforced and perpetrators are more likely to be involved in offending and delinquent behaviour as they age.

6.47 Bullying also impacts adversely on students who are bystanders. These students can feel helpless and out-of-control, fearful and guilty. Their academic performance too may suffer. If bullying is not addressed, these students learn that aggression is acceptable with concomitant adverse effects on their social and emotional skill development as they age.

6.48 Despite the damaging effects, bullying and abuse remain prevalent in New Zealand schools. Bullying tends to be under-reported. This is partly because of the disempowering and silencing effects of bullying on victims. Research also shows that if adults do not respond effectively to complaints, the level of reporting by children and young people falls.

6.49 Under-reporting is also attributable to the way in which bullying is ‘normalised’ in many New Zealand schools. In its recent investigation of complaints at Hutt Valley High School, the Office of the Ombudsmen found that not only had the school minimised serious incidents of abuse, but the Education Review Office had assessed the school as safe even in the face of staff having witnessed and received reports of violent incidents and bullying. The reality seems to be that there is a level of bullying, harassment and abuse which is ‘tolerated’ or accepted as an ‘inevitable’ part of schooling in New Zealand.

Current legislative situation

6.50 The current policy and legislative scheme imposes obligations on schools to prevent bullying including:

6.51 Given the prevalence of bullying and abuse in schools, this legislative and regulatory framework does not provide enough protection for children and young people.

International framework

6.52 The international human rights standards which New Zealand has ratified are unequivocal about a state’s obligation to protect children from violence including all forms of physical or mental violence. They provide a clear mandate to the Government to enact legislation specifically to address violence, abuse and bullying in New Zealand schools. Under Article 19 of UNCROC the government is required to take “all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse”.

6.53 Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights sets out everyone’s right to life, liberty and security of the person whilst Article 5 states that no one shall be subjected to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. Article 9(1) of the ICCPR also guarantees the right to security of the person.

6.54 The right to education is spelt out in ICESCR (Article 13) and UNCROC (Article 18). This is not confined to the right to access education but also incorporates the nature and process of a child’s education. In particular, education must develop respect for human rights, identity, human dignity and democracy and be delivered in a spirit of peace (Articles 28-29 UNCROC). This lays a clear foundation for schools’ responses to violence, abuse or bullying.

Human Rights Commission Proposal – legislation on school responses to violence, abuse and bullying

6.55 The Commission proposes that legislation be enacted to require all schools (public, private and integrated) to:

  1. implement school safety programmes and policies on a whole-school basis
  2. appoint and train safety officers who will facilitate responses to violence, abuse and bullying
  1. institute a process to respond to such complaints that complies with the criteria set out below, unless a particular step would not be in the best interests of the individual child
  1. report annually to the Education Review Office on whole-school approaches to school safety; the number of incidents of violence, abuse and bullying; and outcomes for students generally as well as for those groups often targeted by bullying.[54]
6.56 The Commission proposes the following criteria for schools’ responses to violence, abuse and bullying. Firstly that complaints are followed up within 24 hours with at least the following steps:
6.57 Secondly, where a police report is not appropriate, the safety officer in consultation with the victim(s) and perpetrator(s) will organise and facilitate a restorative process to address the complaint and decide on an appropriate sanction. This process must occur within five days of the complaint and engage the parents/caregivers of the victim(s) and perpetrator(s).

6.58 The proposal for a strong national response to bullying is consistent with the recent suggestion of the Office of the Ombudsmen. That report proposed that these changes could be implemented through a different path, by amending the NAG 5. The Commission considers it would be more powerful for such provisions to be explicitly spelt out in the Education Act.

6.59 It would be crucial for legislation to be supported by adequate resourcing for safety officers and for training and practice development in schools. As already noted, extensive research has been undertaken in New Zealand and overseas around good practice responses to bullying in schools and the importance of a whole-of-school, human rights approach. This is symbolised in some schools through a charter of rights and responsibilities built on UNCROC.[56]

6.60 In New Zealand, the introduction of Positive Behaviour for Learning initiatives in some schools provides a positive start towards creating schools that value and honour human rights - including the right to be safe and free from violence and abuse. Legislation setting out clearer obligations for schools, coupled with training and practice development, is necessary to build on these foundations.

Appendix 1: One page summary of UNCROC

UNCROC affirms that everyone under 18 years has the right to:


Source: Human Rights in Education, UNCROC in a Page, accessible online at http://www.rightsined.org.nz/index.php/resources/human rights/6-treaties-and-other-international-instruments/10-uncroc-in-a-page.html


Appendix 2: Committee on the Rights of the Child’s

2011 Recommendations

Issues
Para
Recommendation
Reservations
9(a)
Withdraw reservations
Legislation
11(a)
Ensure that all existing domestic legislation relating to children is consistent and is brought in compliance with the Convention
11(c)
Consider all child-related legislation as a priority in the Parliament
Coordination
13
Establish a permanent mechanism to ensure high-level and effective coordination of the implementation of the Convention
National Plan of Action
15
Adopt a comprehensive policy and corresponding national plan of action for the implementation of the Convention, in cooperation with the public and private sectors involved in the promotion and protection of children’s rights and based on a child rights approach
Allocation of Resources
17
Initiate a child budgeting exercise that will allow it to specify strategic allocations to implement children’s rights, track this implementation, monitor results and evaluate impact
Dissemination and awareness-raising
19
Strengthen and expand its dissemination and awareness-raising activities in order to ensure that the provisions of the Convention are widely known by the general public, including parents, caregivers, teachers, youth workers and other professionals working with children, as well as children themselves
Training
21
Develop and further strengthen systematic training on their responsibilities under the Convention for all professional groups working for and with children. In this regard, human rights education should be included in the official curriculum at all levels of education and in professional training
Corporate social responsibility
23
Ensure that the business sector complies with international and domestic standards on corporate social responsibility, particularly with regard to respecting child rights
Non-discrimination
25(a)


25(b)






25(c)
Take urgent measures to address disparities in access to services of Maori children and their families (para 25(a))

Strengthen its awareness-raising and other preventive activities against discrimination and, if necessary, take affirmative action for the benefit of children in vulnerable situations, such as Maori and Pacific children, refugee children, migrant children, children with disabilities and lesbian, bisexual, gay and transgender children and children living with persons from these groups

Take all necessary measures to effectively address discrimination

Respect for views of the child
27(a)




27(b)
Promote, facilitate and implement, in legislation as well as in practice, within the family, schools, and the community as well as in institutions and in administrative and judicial proceedings, the principle of respect for the views of the child

Systematically consider the views of the child in formulating laws and policies
Corporal punishment
28
Heighten public awareness about the law concerning corporal punishment (section 59, Crimes Act) and continue to promote positive and non-violent forms of discipline in childrearing
Follow up to UN study on violence against children
29(a)



29(b)






29(c)
Prioritise elimination of all forms of violence against children including by ensuring implementation of the recommendations of the UN Study on violence against children

Provide information on implementation of the recommendations of the UN Study on violence against children, including: development of a national strategy to prevent and address all forms of violence against children, an explicit ban on all forms of violence against children, and a consolidation of data and a research agenda on violence against children.

Cooperate with the Special Representative of the Secretary General on violence against children and seek technical assistance
Family environment
31
Intensify efforts to render appropriate assistance to parents and legal guardians in the performance of their child-rearing responsibilities with timely responses at the local level, including services to parents who need counselling in child-rearing, services for the treatment of alcohol- or drug-related problems, and, in the case of Maori and Pacific Islander populations, culturally appropriate services to enable them to fulfill their parental role
Adoption
33
Resume the review and revision of adoption legislation
Abuse and neglect
35(a)



35(b)





35(c)



35(d)
Establish mechanisms for monitoring the number of cases and the extent of violence, sexual abuse, neglect, maltreatment or exploitation, including within the family, in schools and in institutional or other care

Ensure that professionals working with children (including teachers, social workers, medical professionals, members of the police and the judiciary) receive training on their obligation to report and take appropriate action in suspected cases of domestic violence affecting children

Strengthen support for victims of violence, abuse, neglect and maltreatment in order to ensure that they are not victimized once again during legal proceedings

Provide access to adequate services for recovery, counselling and other forms of reintegration in all parts of the country

Health and health services
37
Address inequalities in access to health services through a coordinated approach across all government departments and greater coordination between health policies and those aimed at reducing income inequality and poverty
Breastfeeding
39
Increase the number of infants up to six months of age that are exclusively breastfed, particularly Maori; promote baby-friendly hospitals and encourage breastfeeding to be included in nursery training.
Adolescent health
41
Strengthen its efforts to provide adolescents with appropriate reproductive health services, and continue to address suicidal behaviour including through targeted preventive measures
Standard of living
43
Take all necessary measures to provide appropriate support to allow disadvantaged families and their children to move out of poverty in a sustained way while, at the same time, continuing to provide assistance to those who remain under the poverty line
Education
45(a)



45(b)



45(c)



45(d)




45(e)



45(f)
Ensure that all children have access to high quality early childhood education and care that, at a minimum, is free for socially disadvantaged families and children

Continue and strengthen its efforts to reduce negative effects of the ethnic (cultural, regional) and social background of children on their enrolment and attendance in school

Invest considerable additional resources in order to ensure the right of all children, including children from all disadvantaged, marginalized and school-distant groups, to a truly inclusive education

Use the disciplinary measure of permanent or temporary exclusion as a means of last resort only, reduce the number of exclusions and ensure the presence of social workers and educational psychologists in school in order to help children at risk with their schooling

Take steps to ensure that parents are not pressured into making donations to schools and that children are not stigmatized if their parents do not, or are unable to, make such donations

Further intensify its efforts to eliminate bullying and violence in schools, including through teaching human rights, peace and tolerance
Out of school care
47
Develop and allocate sufficient funding for services and programmes for school-age children after school and during holiday periods
Economic exploitation and child labour
49
Take appropriate measures, legislative and otherwise, to ensure that no person under the age of 18 is allowed to work in a dangerous workplace. The Committee also reiterates its previous recommendation that the State party ratify the ILO Convention No. 138 on the minimum age of employment.

Child prostitution and child pornography
51
Eliminate any obstacles to the ratification of the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography;[57] take adequate measures to combat the exploitation of migrant girls in prostitution and intensify its efforts to collect data on the extent of sexual exploitation and abuse of children
Child helplines
53
Allocate sufficient funding to enable toll-free, 24-hour access to the child helplines
Administration of juvenile justice
55


55(a)

55(b)

55(c)




55(d)
Fully implement international standards of juvenile justice (para 55) including by:

Raise the minimum age of criminal responsibility

Consider setting the age for criminal majority at 18 years

Develop a broad range of alternative measures to detention for children in conflict with the law; and establish the principle that detention should be used as a measure of last resort and for the shortest period of time as a statutory principle

While awaiting the expeditious withdrawal of its reservation to article 37(c) of the Convention, ensure that, unless in his or her best interests, any child, male or female, deprived of liberty is separated from adults in all places of detention
Protection of witnesses and victims of crime
56
Ensure, through adequate legal provisions and regulations, that all children victims and or witnesses of crimes are provided with the protection required by the Convention
Minority groups
57
In its efforts to improve the situation of children belonging to indigenous groups, to take into account the observations and recommendations made by the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous People following his visit to New Zealand in July 2010, including with regard to the principles enshrined in the Treaty of Waitangi






[1] Committee on the Rights of the Child (2011) General comment No. 13 The right of the child to freedom from all forms of violence. CRC/C/GC/13, para 2(e)

[2] Ibid

[3] Ibid., para 63
[4] Whilst employment issues are largely outside the scope of the Green paper, two of the eight fundamental International Labour Organisation (ILO) Conventions also relate to children’s rights. They are Convention 138, on the Minimum Age for Admission to Employment (1973), and Convention 182, on the Worst Forms of Child Labour (1999).

[5] Article 5, the 1993 Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action
[6] Articles 14, 17(2) and (3), 21(2) and 22 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous peoples, and articles 5, 27 and 30 of UNCROC.
[7] CRC (2011) General comment 13, The right of the child to freedom from all forms of violence
para. 65

[8] Article 19 of UNCROC and general comment 11
[9] Committee on the Rights of the Child (2004) General Comment No. 5: General measures on implementation of the Convention, para. 8.

[10] CRC (2011) Op. Cit.

[11] Committee on the Rights of the Child, 56th Session, Consideration of Reports

Submitted by States Parties under Article 44 of the Convention, Concluding

Observations New Zealand, para 25

[12] CRC, General Comment 11, para 47

[13] Article 23(3) CRPD

[14] Article 23(5) CRPD
[15] Carpinter and Harrington, (April 2006), The Best of Care? An Independent Review of Issues at the Interface of Disability Support and Care and Protection, A report for the Department of Child, Youth and Family and the Disability Services Directorate of the Ministry of Health. http://www.cyf.govt.nz/documents/about-us/news/the-best-of-care.pdf

[16] Ibid, at page xiv
[17] This is consistent with previous submissions from the Commission recommending that the Education Act 1989 be amended to clarify that the right to education for disabled children means the right to inclusive education in their local school, and to set out minimum standards in relation to this right.

[18] CRC, General Comment 11, para 3(h)
[19] http://www.cyf.govt.nz/documents/about-us/publications/charter-for-children-and-young-people-under-12.pdf

[20] CRC, General Comment 11, para 47

[21] United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (2003), Concluding Observations:

New Zealand, CRC/C/15/Add.216, 27 October 2003, para 21

[22] UN Committee Against Torture, (2009) Concluding observations of the Committee

against Torture: New Zealand, CAT/C/NZL/CO/5, 14 May 2009
[23] http://www.msd.govt.nz/about-msd-and-our-work/publications-resources/planning-strategy/agenda-children/

[24] Para 1.18
[25] http://www.nhc.health.govt.nz/sites/www.nhc.health.govt.nz/files/documents/publications/the-best-start-in-life-21may.pdf

[26] CRC (2011) general comment 13, para 68

[27] http://www.ontario.ca/breakingthecycle
[28] http://www.children.gov.on.ca/htdocs/English/documents/breakingthecycle/2011AnnualReport.pdf

[29] Committee on the Rights of the Child, General Comment 13 (2011), paras 58-59.
[30] Holzer, P. J. (2007). Defining the public health model for the child welfare services context (Resource Sheet No. 11); O’Donnell M., Scott D A., & Stanley, F., (2008) "Child Abuse and Neglect – is it time for a public health approach?" Australian and NZ Journal of Public Health, Vol 32, No. 4, pp 325-330; Scott, D.A. (2006) "Towards a Public Health Model of Child Protection in Australia" (pdf 1.7Mb) Communities, Families and Children Australia, 1(1) 9-16.

[31] http://unsr.jamesanaya.org/docs/countries/2011-report-newzealand-a-hrc-18-35-add4_en.pdf
[32] Committee on the Rights of the Child (2009) General Comment No. 11: Indigenous children and their rights under the Convention, CRC/C/GC/11, para 5

[33] Ibid, para 31
[34] Ibid, para 39. This is reiterated in UNDRIP’s requirement that good faith consultation is premised on obtaining indigenous people’s “free, prior and informed consent” (Article 19).

[35] Ibid, para 46
[36] International Research Institute for Māori and Indigenous Peoples (2002), Iwi and Māori Provider Success, (UOA: Auckland).
[37] Community and Voluntary Sector Working Party (2001), Communities and Government – Potential for Partnership: Community and Voluntary Sector Working Party report
[38] CRC (2009) General Comment 11, para 80
[39] Ibid, para 20
[40] Committee on the Rights of the Child (2004) General Comment No. 5: General measures on implementation of the Convention, para. 8.
[41] Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety (2010) Healthy Child, Healthy Future: A Framework for the Universal Child Health Promotion Programme in Northern Ireland. Belfast: Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety. http://www.dhsspsni.gov.uk/healthychildhealthyfuture.pdf

[42] ILO (2010) ILO World Social Security Report 2010/11. Geneva: ILO
[43] Mikton & Butchart (2009) Child Maltreatment Prevention: a systematic review of reviews. Bulletin of the World Health Organisation, 87, 353-261

[44] Mardani J (2010) Preventing child neglect in New Zealand. A public health

assessment of the evidence, current approach and best practice guidance, OCC, NZ.pxi.

[45] http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/chile_36227.html

[46] http://beehive.govt.nz/release/independent-inquiry-serious-abuse

[47] Article 16 UNCROC
[48] Munro, E (2007) Confidentiality in a preventive child welfare system. Ethics and social welfare, 1 (1 p p41-55

[49] Wallace, L & Bunting L (2007) An examination of local, national and international

arrangements for the mandatory reporting of child abuse: the implications for Northern

Ireland. NI Policy & Research Unit.

[50]http://www.occ.org.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0007/7882/CC_Preventing_child_neglect%20122010.pdf
[51] The Office of the Children’s Commission has developed useful flowcharts identifying how to assess the most appropriate responses in cases of school bullying, school violence and child abuse respectively. Office of the Children’s Commissioner (2009) School Safety: An Inquiry into the safety of students at school, pp 73, 75 and 76. http://www.occ.org.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0016/6028/OCC_SchoolSafetyReport_160309.pdf .
[52] Office of the Ombudsmen (2011) Report of David McGee Ombudsman on Complaints Arising Out of Bullying at Hutt Valley High School. December 2007
[53] Office of the Children’s Commissioner op. cit. p 4.

[54] For example, the United Kingdom’s Department for Children, Schools and Families has produced a suite of guidance for schools and local authorities about preventing and responding to bullying. This includes specific guidance about homophobic bullying; bullying that is linked to racism, religion or culture; and bullying of disabled children. http://www.anti-bullyingalliance.org.uk/tackling_bullying_behaviour/in_schools/law,_policy_and_guidance/safe_to_learn.aspx
[55] This does not mean the perpetrator should be stood-down. All options should be considered with the overall aims of ensuring students’ right to safety alongside their right to education.
[56] A summary of relevant rights from UNCROC is set out on page 9 of the Commission’s 2009 report School violence, bullying and abuse: a human rights analysis - http://www.hrc.co.nz/hrc_new/hrc/cms/files/documents/01-Sep-2009_14-08-40_Human_Rights_School_Violence_FINAL.pdf

[57] Subsequently ratified


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