Public education critical to reduce violence against children
PUBLIC EDUCATION, sensitisation and training on violence prevention are critical areas Jamaica will need to address if it is to eliminate or significantly reduce acts of violence against children.
This is according to Outcome Four of the National Plan of Action for an Integrated Response to Children and Violence (NPACV), which is being finetuned by a technical working group comprising of multistakeholders in government and non-governmental organisations.
“One of the things that we want to show is that at least 30 per cent of the adult population understand the link between corporal punishment and trauma, and that they know alternative strategies to violent discipline,” said Dr Elizabeth Ward, chair of the Violence Prevention Alliance (VPA).
Ward made this disclosure during a presentation on the NPACV at the recent 27th Annual Research Conference Workshop organised by the Faculty of Medical Sciences in collaboration with the VPA at the University of the West Indies, Mona, recently.
The expectation, she added, was that 30 per cent of the adult population could name at least three rights that children were entitled to and three corresponding violence-prevention strategies within the next five years.
In addition, it was further expected that by 2023, at least 50 per cent of the child population should be able to name three rights and three corresponding responsibilities to prevent violence.
She also underscored the importance for media organisations to build capacity to respond to and report cases of violence against children.
The completion of the NPACV fulfils Jamaica’s commitment to the Global Partnership to End Violence Against Children. Jamaica was selected to become a Pathfinder country, joining the Global Partnership to End Violence Against Children, with a committed goal to end the abuse, exploitation and all forms of violence against children.
As a Pathfinder country, Jamaica will use evidence-based, data-driven approaches and collaborative actions as the way forward to achieve safety for all children and share lessons learned with the rest of the world.