Child abuse in South Africa: rights and wrongs |
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Authors: | Linda M Richter Andrew R L Dawes |
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Institution: | 1. Human Sciences Research Council and the Universities of KwaZulu‐Natal and the Witwatersrand, South Africa;2. Human Sciences Research Council and University of Cape Town, South Africa, and the University of Oxford, UK |
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Abstract: | In a country in which human rights feature prominently in our discourse about who we are, as well as in the South African constitutional and legal framework, so many wrongs continue to be done to children. One category of wrongs is abuse, but it is not the only one. Poverty, patriarchy and gender violence, as well as the socialised obedience, dependency and silence of women and children, create conditions in which abuse can occur, often with few consequences. South Africa has extremely high rates of both physical and sexual abuse of children. Progressive, rights‐based legislation exists to protect children, but it is not adequately supported or resourced by services to fulfil their provisions. Child abuse and neglect will not be significantly reduced in South Africa, without simultaneous improvements in the social and economic conditions in which very large numbers of children live. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | child abuse South Africa child rights poverty |
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