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Children in a Changing Climate (CCC)Region
Global
Programme Summary
Launched in June 2008, this child-led global consultation programme is an effort to secure children's influence in preventing and adapting to climate change. Children in a Changing Climate (CCC) is a global initiative spanning research, action, advocacy, and learning with the purpose of engaging children as protagonists - actors in their own development - with an influence on issues of international importance. The organisations involved in the programme - Plan International, National Children's Bureau, Institute of Development Studies, Save the Children, United Nations Children's Fund United Kingdom (UNICEF UK), ActionAid, and Footprint Friends - are working to help children directly voice their concerns and solutions to decision-makers. Communication StrategiesCCC has its foundations in collaborative action-research with children in the Philippines and El Salvador, where the participation and voice of children in policy-making on disasters and climate change was investigated and supported. This research was motivated by the conviction that, "[t]o date, strategies to respond to the impacts of climate change have paid little attention to how adaptation measures can be child-sensitive, let alone child led. There is little institutional knowledge and information available on child-led adaptation initiatives or autonomous action taken by children to reduce their communities' vulnerability to climate change impacts." This initial investigation led to the conception of a more extensive research programme; the research dimension then expanded to a focus on 3 other areas: action, policy, and learning. The 4 areas are mutually supporting, and comprise a body of work and series of projects that seek to ensure that the voices of excluded groups can influence community and policy responses to climate change. Children's participation is the core programme strategy. At the December 2008 United Nations (UN) talks in Poznan, Poland, CCC highlighted examples of how children can be engaged in tackling climate change at the local and national level. CCC presented a participatory video project from Nepal. Making the films allowed the children to explore how the changing climate is impacting them and their families and how they are coping. Most importantly, according to the organisers, the video project gave children an opportunity to discuss the changing climate with others in their community and identify concrete adaptation measures that could enhance their communities' capacity to cope with climate change. The resulting report [in PDF format] and film are being used for local, national, and international advocacy, emphasising children's right to be heard, children's right to adaptation, and the need to reflect children's needs in national adaptation plans. CCC is scaling up this effort to work with children in communities across the world to document their voices in ways that enable them to be heard in national policy processes such as National Adaptation Programmes of Action. Development IssuesChildren, Youth, Environment. Key PointsAccording to organisers, participation is one of the 4 fundamental principles of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). Click here to download a CCC publication in PDF format centred around this connection between climate change and justice. "A Right to Participate: Securing Children's Role in Climate Change Adaptation" introduces the policy spaces, the challenges, and the case for children's participation, presenting policy recommendations for addressing the needs of children under climate change and the approach that CCC is taking. It also includes various statistics, such as these (from the United Nations Children's Fund - UNICEF - 2008):
PartnersInstitute of Development Studies (IDS), Plan, Save the Children UK, National Children's Bureau, ActionAid, UNICEF UK, Risk Frontiers, Footprint Friends, Risk Frontiers. ContactChildren in a Changing Climate (CCC)
United Kingdom (UK)
Related SummariesSourceEmail from Nick Hall to The Communication Initiative on November 2 2008; CCC website; and update from CCC to The Communication Initiative on February 25 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site November 03 2008 Last Updated February 27 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTEDTop 5 Related Pages for this Summary |
Special FocusEmergencies and SE Asia
Having just passed the 4th anniversary of the Indian Ocean tsunami, on the whole Southeast Asian countries:
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