Modern Tools

Do you think children have the same rights as adults?

Do you think children have the same rights as adults?

Every right, for every child. Children and young people have the same general human rights as adults and also specific rights that recognize their special needs. Children are neither the property of their parents nor are they helpless objects of charity.

What do you need to know about child rights?

What are child rights? Child rights are human rights that also recognize the special needs for care and protection of minors — generally defined as anyone younger than 18. International agreements on child rights say that all children should grow up in the spirit of peace, dignity, tolerance, freedom, equality, and solidarity.

What does the Convention on the Rights of the child say?

1 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child not only accords the child the right freely to express its views on matters affecting the child. It also, and crucially, gives the child an assurance that these views will be given ‘due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child’.

What was the declaration of the Rights of the Child?

1924 — The League of Nations adopts the Declaration of the Rights of the Child. The short document recognizes that “mankind owes to the child the best that it has to give.” The declaration is the precursor to later child rights measures by the United Nations.

How are children’s rights and rights of adults related?

Indeed some critics of children’s rights will concede that adults have duties to protect important interests of children but deny that these interests correlate with rights held by children. Now clearly (4) and (7) contradict one another: either children are right-holders or they are not. (4) follows from (2) and (3).

Is it difficult for parents to set limits with adult children?

It can be very challenging for parents to set limits with adult children whom have become overly dependent. The parents often feel drained and emotionally depleted. They want their child to be happy on his own, yet they live in fear of not doing enough to help their child get there. This is by no means an easy situation!

1 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child not only accords the child the right freely to express its views on matters affecting the child. It also, and crucially, gives the child an assurance that these views will be given ‘due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child’.

Are there any critics of children’s rights at all?

Indeed some critics of children’s rights will concede that adults have duties to protect important interests of children but deny that these interests correlate with rights held by children. Now clearly (4) and (7) contradict one another: either children are right-holders or they are not.