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Listen to children and adults before
acting. Ensure that interventions are
based on consultation with the affected communities, reflect what they need
and take into consideration the age and stage of development of the children
involved.
Understand and respect the culture and
religion of the affected population; give material and other support so that
grieving and mourning practices and rites can take place.
Help children, family members, friends and neighbours find out what happened to those who are
missing, and find each other, and let them know that efforts are underway.
Set up “child-friendly” spaces as soon as
possible and activities that normalize the lives of children, give them a
sense of safety, structure and predictability through drawing, puppet-making
and playing, drama and songs, story-telling, sports, non-formal education,
etc. These activities also allow for
the release of any stored distress.
Restore normal schooling as soon as possible.
Encourage children to ask as many questions as
they want, and be ready to answer them truthfully.
Focus and build on interventions that
strengthen the population’s resiliency and resources, and current and
traditional ways of coping when they are in the best interests of the
child.
Involve youth in organizing activities for
younger children: undertakings that give an affected person a sense of
accomplishment has a healing effect.
Involve children, their families and
communities in the psychosocial recovery process, discussing with them their
perceptions, and how they see their needs.
Set up support group discussions, as much as
possible accompanied by involvement in concrete and meaningful activities
that give a sense of accomplishment and control over one’s life: recreational and non-formal education for
children, common interest activities for young people, sewing, gardening,
building, leading children’s activities etc.
Promote and support interventions which
preserve and reinforce the cohesion of the family, and discourage any which risks
separating children from their families.
Promote activities and opportunities to allow
children to express their experiences and feelings so that they may make
meaning from and integrate
them into their lives, as much as possible within a familiar environment and only
if:
The child is ready for this expression – eliciting emotional material
too early can cause more distress and potential harm to the child.
We can ensure further, on-going comfort and help.
Identify referral services for the small number
of children and adults who will need professional, medical assistance (some
of these people may have had pre-existing psychiatric illnesses).
Assess the need and provide support to adults
caring for children for example provision of crèches or child focused
activities (e.g. child friendly spaces) which allow
adults some time to recover and re-energise them so that they can provide the
support children need.
Provide training to those caring/responsible
for children so that they are comfortable dealing with children’s natural
distress and recognise children who may need more specialised
support.
These
principles represent the views of the following agencies: the International
Rescue Committee (IRC), Save the Children UK (SCUK), the United Nations
Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) and World Vision International (WVI).
Organizations
wishing to work on behalf of children are strongly encouraged to endorse
these principles.
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