Today marks
Universal Children’s Day, the anniversary of the UN adopting the Convention on
the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). So far all countries in the world except the
USA have joined the Convention, showing political will to protect children and
their rights.
The
European Union, not a signatory of the Convention (yet), but having Member
States that have all committed themselves to align their policies with the
Rights of the Child, is facing its greatest challenges in decades. At the same
time the current European Commission has recently announced measures that
affect the lives of children in Europe – directly or by influencing the lives
of their parents and the institutional framework around them.
The
announcement to build the Pillar of European Social Rights was welcomed by all,
including parents all over Europe. The EU Summit in Gothenburg last week has
proclaimed the construction of the Pillar, a major demonstration of political
will. The Summit also marked the publication of a new EU initiative on creating
a European Education Area by 2025.
These
political initiatives are more than welcome, binding EU-level measures to
ensure children’s right to parental care, guidance and education, the right to
a good start in life, the right to 21st century formal education (if
parents opt for that) and lifelong learning opportunities for all have been
demanded by organised parents all over Europe for years. At the same time, as
the saying goes, the devil is in the detail. Representatives of parents,
bringing the voice of their children into the debate, will work hard in the
forthcoming years to ensure measures are implemented in a way that ensures the
rights of children and their parents as protected by the UNCRC.
This
Universal Children’s Day is therefore the best opportunity to emphasise the
need for strong measures to ensure that parents are empowered by knowledge and
financial support to provide the best and make the best choices for their
children, and to remind policy makers that they are obliged through the UNCRC
to provide this in their own national contexts and push for this approach to be
implemented on European level. Investing in families is key for tackling
today’s problems as well as preventing tomorrow’s.
It is
crucial that planned measures answer needs and wishes of parents, a large
cohort of voters at the 2019 European Parliament elections, showing signs of
growing scepticism towards the EU. Civil society organisations, first of all
EPA, have a major responsibility to amplify the voice of parents with regards
to this political agenda. The majority who do not want to be forced, but make a
free choice to go to work while they have young children, who do not necessarily
want to take their children to an early childhood institution at a very young
age, but see the need for their own learning to provide the best education for
their children.
EPA will
continue to voice the wishes of parents concerned about and responsible for
ensuring the future of their children. Parents are concerned about the formal
education of their children, about creating a free option that is not yet there
in any country in Europe, to ensure the best interest of the child is ensured
by equitable measures, and to be part of curricular and methodological reforms
towards a really 21st century education.
This year’s
topic for the Universal Children’s Day is #KidsTakeOver. We must make sure they
are not left alone, but guided and supported by their parents – and policy
makers accept our right and children’s need for this.
Eszter
Salamon
President
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