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THE CHILD RIGHTS TO
DEVELOPMENT Sambas
Wiradisuria Department
of Child Health, Medical School Padjadjaran University - Hasan Sadikin
Hospital, Bandung, Indonesia Development
is referred to as rights in the Convention of the Rights of the Child. Yet
the purpose of the whole convention is, in a sense, to promote the
development of the child. This paper analyses what the convention says
about child development and shows how this fundamental right and complex
concept can be translated into policy and programmes in countries with
different cultural norms and economic conditions. The convention's
principal formulation about��development��is found in article 6:1)
states parties recognize that every child has the inherent right to life.
2) state parties shall ensure to the maximum extent possible the survival
and development of the child. Article 6 can be seen as a platform for other
developmental principles found throughout the convention. Preamble of the
convention of the Rights of the child states that children should be
brought up in the spirit of peace, dignity, tolerance, freedom, equality
and solidarity. While the convention is a result of a century-long effort
of making children visible and acknowledging their specific needs, its
actual content is quite modern. Building on contemporary science and
validated experience, particularly the thinking of professionals working
with children wisely, it has also been worded in an open-ended way that
allows for new findings and evolving interpretations. When translating its
principles and pro-visions inter practice, therefore, one also needs to
take into account prevailing understandings of childhood, child development
and related socialization and child-rearing practices in any given context.
Apart from the child, him-or herself, families, governments (not least, local
government) and child-related professionals including pediatricians, teachers
and social services staff, all play key roles in the implementation of the
child's development, In considering how the might work together in
complementary ways to fulfil the rights of the child, it is important to
understand that they may all have different perspectives and priorities, some
of these are considered here.