|
Number
and Title
|
Text
of operative paragraphs
|
|
IIN/RES.
1 (XIX-04)
The Family as the Institution with Primary Responsibility for the
Protection, Upbringing, and Integral Development of Children
|
-
To urge the Member States to implement actions aimed
at improving conditions for the integral well-being of
the family, by strengthening the educational function of
the father and mother, and recognizing it as the arena
in which a culture of rights is exercised and promoted.
-
To request that the Inter-American Children’s Institute include, in
its next Strategic Plan, actions to help reinforce the
family as the natural and social environment for the
development and welfare of children.
-
To ask the Inter-American Children's Institute to
draw up and present to the Directing Council an
Inter-American Project for Public Policy, with an
awareness of the family and the community, which, in a
cross-cutting fashion, will serve to recognize, support,
protect, and disseminate the institution of the family
as the main arena for the exercise and promotion of a
culture of respect for the rights of children.
-
To recommend that the Member States of the
Organization of American States and the organs of the
inter-American system support the implementation of this
resolution by incorporating awareness of the family into
their different planning and decision-making processes.
|
|
IIN/RES.
2 (XIX-04)
Evolution of the Child’s Relationship with
the Family
|
-
To request the IIN Office
to study and monitor the policies, programs, projects, and
activities required for making up an evolutionary approach
to child and family-related issues.
-
To urge the Member States
to make available to the IIN –on a voluntary basis–
information on the above programs, projects, and activities
for the purpose of recording it in the PIINFA Database.
-
To request the IIN to
design, subject to resource availability and based on the
information mentioned in item 1, a training course on
“Children, Family, and Rights” addressed to operators
and managers of child and family programs which should
provide for an integrated view of the evolutionary
development approach and the gradual exercise of rights, and
make it available to the Member States within the framework
of the technical assistance offered by the IIN.
-
To urge the
Inter-American Agency for Cooperation and Development
and other agencies in the inter-American system to
support the proper implementation of this resolution.
|
|
IIN/RES.
3 (XIX-04)
Children’s Rights and Their Relation to the
Different Types of Families
|
To
entrust the IIN to prepare, subject to its resource
availability, a comprehensive study on the rights of
children and their families and to design a proposal on the
possible forms of protecting children’s rights.
|
|
IIN/RES.
4 (XIX-04)
The
Doctrine of Integral Protection and Current Family Law
|
-
To urge Member states to review, if appropriate,
their family law and make it consistent with the
Doctrine of Integral Protection.
-
To entrust the Inter-American Children’s
Institute to prepare, subject to its resource
availability, a compared law study on family law in
force in the member states.
-
To entrust the IIN to prepare, subject to its
resource availability, a study on the interpretation and
application of the principle of the best interest of the
child within the framework of family law in force in the
member states.
|
|
IIN/RES.
5 (XIX-04)
Family Violence and Its Impact on Child
Development
|
-
To urge those member states that may require so
to design or to strengthen state policies for the
prevention and treatment of family violence.
-
To request the IIN to compile, subject to its
resource availability, the experience of member states
on intervention models on family violence developed by
governmental or civil society entities in the member
states.
|
|
IIN/RES.
6 (XIX-04)
Promoting
a Culture of Respect for Children’s Rights: The Roles of
the Family, the State, Civil Society, and the Media
|
To
urge the IIN to develop, according to its resource
availability, effective strategies to sensitize
communication media practitioners on the importance of their
role for the protection and promotion of the rights of
children and their families.
|
|
IIN/RES.
7 (XIX-04)
Funding
of Resolutions adopted by the Congress
|
-
To request the Office of the Director General of the Inter-American
Children’s Institute to take the necessary steps before
the General Secretariat of the Organization of American
States for the creation of a specific account to fund the
preparation and presentation of an Inter-American Project
for Strengthening the Family and other resolutions adopted
by the Congress;
-
To urge the member states to contribute, to the
extent of their possibilities, to the effective
implementation of the resolutions adopted by the
Congress.
|
Follows the full text of the Declaration also approved by the Nineteenth
Pan American Child Congress:
DECLARATION
OF THE
NINETEENTH PAN AMERICAN CHILD CONGRESS
The
delegates of the Member states of the Organization of American
States (OAS) to the Nineteenth Pan American Child Congress held in
Mexico City on 27-29 October, 2004, after discussing and analyzing
its main theme “The Family: Basis for the Integral Development
of Children and Adolescents”, hereby declare:
CONSIDERING:
- That
in the framework of the Inter-American System, the
“Inter-American Declaration on the Family” approved by the
General Assembly of the Organization of American States
(AG/RES. 678 XIII-0/83) declares that “Every human being,
especially every boy and girl, has the right to a family and
to the stability of the family institution;”
- That
sub-paragraph 4 of paragraph 137 in Advisory Opinion No. 17 of
the Inter-American Court of Human Rights of August 2002 stated
that “the family is the primary context for children’s
development and exercise of their rights”, thus establishing
that the exercise or protection of rights is not possible
without the family as such primary –and social–
environment. The Court further stated that “the State must
support and strengthen the family through the various measures
it requires to best fulfill its natural function in this
field.” The state should, by means of its whole social
institutional structure, protect the integrity of the family
in order to enable it to perform its social role of protection
of and respect for children’s rights.
- That
the Nineteenth Pan American Child Congress was convened within
the framework of the tenth anniversary of the International
Year of the Family established in Resolution 44/82 adopted by
the Forty-fourth Session of the United Nations General
Assembly on 8 December, 1989;
- That
this year is also the fifteenth anniversary of the adoption of
the Convention on the Rights of the Child by the United
Nations on 20 November, 1989;
- That
the Convention on the Rights of the Child sets forth a series
of principles and provisions that identify the family as a key
element for the integral development and protection of
children’s rights;
- That the introduction to Chapter 18 on “Children
and Youth” in the Plan of Action of the Third Summit of the
Americas held in Quebec stated that the promotion of
children’s rights, as well as their development, protection
and participation are essential to ensure the realization of
their full potential; the Plan also proposes such specific
actions as “... Identify, share and promote best practices
(...), particularly community-based approaches
aimed at supporting families, meeting the needs of children
and adolescents at risk and protecting them…”;
- That
Resolution AG/RES 1951 (XXXIII-O/03) on the PROMOTION AND
PROTECTION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF CHILDREN IN THE AMERICAS
adopted by the OAS General assembly on 10 June, 2003 urged the
Member states to watch over the inclusion of children’s
rights in the work agenda of specialized organizations and
conferences, and organs and entities of the Organization of
American States;
- That the
Inter-American Children’s Institute has undertaken a
significant effort for the promotion and protection of
children’s rights within the framework of its 2000-2004
Strategic Plan;
- That such Strategic
Plan has enabled the IIN to move forward on the implementation
of public policies, regulatory prototypes, and information
mechanisms in the OAS member states, thus reasserting the role
of the family as a protective environment and the state’s
assurance of the enforcement of children’s rights.
BEARING
IN MIND:
-
The
Keynote Addresses that referred to each of the six sub-themes
of the Congress, as follows: FIRST: “The
Family as the Institution with Primary Responsibility for the
Protection, Upbringing, and Integral Development of Children
and Adolescents”; SECOND:
“Evolution of the Child’s Relationship with the Family”;
THIRD: “Children’s Rights and their Relation to the
Different Types of Families”; FOURTH: “The Doctrine of
Integral Protection and Current Family Law”; FIFTH: QUINTO:
“Family Violence and its impact on Child Development”, and
SIXTH: “Promoting a Culture of Respect for Children’s
Rights: The Roles of the Family, the State, Civil Society and
the Media”;
-
The conclusions of the three working groups on the
above mentioned sub-themes which, among other aspects,
establish:
-
That the family plays a key
role in the integral protection of children, which is gradual and
evolves according to their stage
of development;
-
That the gradual exercise of
children’s rights also follows the same evolution process, which
should be necessarily
healthy and conducive;
-
That children’s participation within the family
should be noted as it is also exercised gradually according to the
above
mentioned evolution and that the family is the natural environment
that enables the referred shift towards autonomy
and self-determination;
-
That the right-based approach
is the organizational core of guidance and educational processes,
addressed to both
children and the family;
-
That the need has been verified
for a right-based approach training of the personnel who operates
child and family
programs;
-
That the heterogeneity and cultural diversity that
characterize the countries in the region bring about a variety of family
structures and organizations;
-
That efforts to protect children’s rights may
benefit from studies on the family within legal frameworks in the region; on
family law within the framework of the doctrine of integral
protection, and on children’s right to live with a
family within the framework of the principle of the best interest
of the child;
-
That the existence of important sectors of Latin
American societies living in exclusion and poverty conditions has been
confirmed and has an impact on family organization and structure
and generates dysfunction, precludes
adequate child protection, restricts child opportunities, and
promotes a vicious cycle of right infringement and poverty reproduction;
-
That such situation calls for additional attention
from the authorities responsible for designing and enforcing coordinated, cross-sectional, integral and overall child social
policies.
-
That family violence has
gained an alarming dimension in the region, considering that its
main victims are children
whose rights are severely violated;
-
That states recognize some progress in the awareness
and approach of this issue, but the difficulty persists of how to
assess its true magnitude due to the absence of objective data
and, in many cases, to its lack of visibility
as it mostly occurs within the privacy of family coexistence;
-
That communication and
information are key social processes within any social
organization;
-
That communication in
particular plays a major role in politics, economics and culture
of all societies throughout
the world and are determining factors of the dynamics and the
functional nature of the various family
structures;
-
That it has been consequently demonstrated that the
media play a determining role in the creation of public opinion and
therefore no cultural change can be conceived without the
participation of this social actor;
-
That, within the framework of democracies, the media
are the natural environment for peoples to exercise their right to
free expression;
-
That the family is a natural environment for the
generation of a culture of rights;
CONCLUDE:
-
That
the political will stated by the Member states at this
Nineteenth Pan American Child Congress aims to recognize,
support, protect and promote the family as the main
environment for the protection and advocacy of children’s
rights.
-
That
the six sub-themes discussed during the Congress have become a
valuable platform of knowledge that allows for understanding
and ranking families according to their different roles and
functions, as well as for fostering a series of concrete
actions to be undertaken by the Inter-American Children’s
Institute and the OAS member states.
-
That
those actions reflect in the seven resolutions adopted by this
Congress which will be duly considered by the Member states
for the preparation and implementation of their child legal
provisions and policies.
RECOMMEND:
-
The
Inter-American Children’s Institute to include, among
others, the following mandates provided for in the seven
Congress resolutions in its 2005-2008 Strategic Plan:
-
The
preparation and presentation to the Directing Council of an
Inter-American Project on Public Policies under a family
and community-based approach;
-
The design of a training course on “Children, Family and
Rights” for child and family program operators and managers;
-
The
preparation of an integral study on the rights of children and
their families;
-
A comparative family law survey in the countries of the
region;
-
The preparation of a study on the interpretation and
application of the principle of the best interest of the child in the
framework of justice and family law, and
-
The compilation of experience gained by government
organizations and civil society entities in the application of intervention models on family violence in the member states.
-
The development of effective strategies to sensitize social
communication practitioners on the importance of their role
for the protection and promotion of the rights of children and
their families.
-
This
Declaration to be as widely disseminated as possible through
the channels provided by the Organization of American States
and those available in the member states.
In Mexico City, on the
twenty-ninth day of October, 2004.
|