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Children, Youth and Environments
Vol 13, No.1 (Spring 2003)
ISSN 1546-2250
Street
Children, Human Rights, and Public
Health: A Critique and Future Directions
Catherine
Panter-Brick
Department of Anthropology, University of Durham;
Citation:
Panter-Brick, Catherine “Street
Children, Human Rights, and Public Health: A Critique and
Future Directions” Children, Youth and Environments
13(1), Spring 2003. Retrieved [date] from http://colorado.edu/journals/cye.
Abstract
This
review presents a critique of the academic and welfare literature
on street children in developing countries, with supporting
evidence from studies of homelessness in industrialized
nations. The turn of the twenty-first century has seen a
sea change of perspective in studies concerning street youth.
This review examines five stark criticisms of the category
“street child” and of research that focuses
on the identifying characteristics of a street lifestyle
rather than on the children themselves and the depth or
diversity of their actual experiences. Second, it relates
the change of approach to a powerful human rights discourse—the
legal and conceptual framework provided by the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child—which emphasizes
children’s rights as citizens and recognizes their
capabilities to enact change in their own lives. Finally,
this article examines literature focusing specifically on
the risks to health associated with street or homeless lifestyles.
Risk assessment that assigns street children to a category
“at risk” should not overshadow helpful analytical
approaches focusing on children’s resiliency and long-term
career life prospects. This review thus highlights some
of the challenging academic and practical questions that
have been raised regarding current understandings of street
children.
Key
Words: homeless, youth, homelessness, risk, resilience,
poverty, ethics, childhood
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