Misguided Kindness: rapport van Save the Children over opvang van kinderen in Haiti

ingevoerd op 3-3-2011

Misguided Kindness: Making the right decisions for children in emergencies
How should we care for the most vulnerable children after disaster strikes?

In every humanitarian crisis, concerned outsiders respond to tragedy with actions that take children away from their families and communities – often with unintended but damaging consequences. Again and again, girls and boys are ‘rescued’ out of affected areas into orphanages or adopted into new families elsewhere in the belief that they will be better cared for away from their devastated homes.

Using lessons learnt in emergencies, from the genocide in Rwanda to the Asian Tsunami and the earthquake in Haiti, our report, Misguided Kindness, demonstrates what action is needed to keep families together during crises and to bring separated children back into a safe and nurturing family life.

Above all, this report urges people to take action to make sure that their assistance is channelled towards interventions that help children in emergencies rather than potentially cause them harm.

“It is critical that the messages conveyed by Save the Children’s ‘Misguided Kindness’ report be acknowledged and urgently acted upon by individuals, agencies and governments.”
Nigel Cantwell, International Consultant on Child Protection Policies
Download Misguided Kindness: Making the right decisions for children in emergencies (PDF 613KB) from the website of Save the Children: