hildren in the Netherlands are among the happiest in the world, research has suggested, and experts say that there could be a number of reasons why this is the case.
A UNICEF report published last year found that children in the Netherlands had the highest sense of wellbeing. The United Nations children’s agency analyzed data across 41 high-income countries, ranking the countries according to how they scored on children’s mental wellbeing, physical health, and the development of both academic and social skills.
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Showing posts with label Children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children. Show all posts
November 27, 2021
November 24, 2019
Netherlands-Court decission: Netherlands does not have to help kids from ISIS parents trapped in Syria
The Netherlands will not have to retrieve children of Dutch citizens
awaiting their fates in Syrian detention and displacement camps, the
kids of Dutch women who left the Netherlands to enter conflict zones in
Syria and Iraq. The Appellate Court in The Hague overturned a lower
court's ten-day old order on an emergency appeal filed on behalf of the
Dutch government.
Read more at:
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/22/netherlands-help-kids-trapped-syria-appellate-court
Read more at:
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/22/netherlands-help-kids-trapped-syria-appellate-court
November 11, 2019
The Netherlands: Court orders Netherlands to bring back kids from Dutch ISIS mothers, but not mothers, stuck in Syria
A court in Den Haag ordered the Netherlands to quickly bring 56 children
of Dutch parents back to the country from Syrian detention and
displacement camps. The case was filed on behalf of 23 mothers living in
the camps. In its verdict, the court noted that "the children have not
chosen to go to Syria or to stay in Syria. They are sitting there now
because their parents have been involved in ISIS.
Read more at:Court orders Netherlands to bring back kids, but not mothers, stuck in Syria | NL Times:
Read more at:Court orders Netherlands to bring back kids, but not mothers, stuck in Syria | NL Times:
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May 28, 2018
EU immigration policies: OECD finds children with non-European parents face major hurdles growing up.
OECD: Children with non-European parents face major education, employment hurdles
Read more at :
http://p.dw.com/p/2yTvO
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April 12, 2017
EU: Going Dutch? What Americans can learn from how children are raised in the Netherlands - by Amy Perrette
Dutch grammar school |
Data backs up Acosta's impression. In the latest UNICEF study ranking 29 of the world's richest industrialized countries according to child well-being, Dutch children come out on top. America ranks 26th, just above Lithuania and Latvia.
Acosta and her British friend, Michele Hutchison (also an expat married to a Dutch man), decided to document the differences they saw between their own pressurized childhoods and the Dutch parenting style, and explain what it is about the Dutch approach that is producing such contented kids. The result is their book, "The Happiest Kids in the World: How Dutch Parents Help Their Kids (and Themselves) by Doing Less."
“Scrap the idea of ‘quality time,’ as American and British parents know it,” says Hutchison. “That is too stressful and puts too much pressure on planning and finances.”
Instead, Dutch parents enjoy spending lots of relaxed time together at family meals, or having the children play nearby while the parent is attending to his or her own interests and projects.
Part of why Dutch parents are able to have that low-key family time is because they allow their children a high degree of independence, even allowing them to climb trees unsupervised and bike alone at a young age.
“It isn’t that the Dutch aren’t aware of risk,” Acosta says. “They just keep the risk in perspective.”
Catherine Tamis-LeMonda, professor of applied psychology at NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, says that low-stress start to schooling makes good sense.
“A huge number of studies show that children's motivation to do things — to be engaged, to learn about their world — goes up when they make choices about what to do,” she says.
Stressing less and relaxing more as the recipe for happy children? It might be time we all “go Dutch.”
Read more: Going Dutch? What Americans can learn from how children are raised in the Netherlands - TODAY.com
September 8, 2016
REFUGEES : UNICEF Report Finds Half of All Refugees Are Now Children - by Alexander Smith
Children now make up nearly half of the world's refugee population,
according to a new report from the United Nations children agency.
The report published Wednesday comes not long after the image of a bloodied 5-year-old named Omran Daqneesh refocused international attention on the conflict in Syria, which has created millions of refugees.
"We must not forget that each child, each picture, represents many millions of children in danger at home — and many millions of children who have left their homes," the UNICEF report noted.
Read more: UNICEF Report Finds Half of All Refugees Are Now Children - NBC News
The report published Wednesday comes not long after the image of a bloodied 5-year-old named Omran Daqneesh refocused international attention on the conflict in Syria, which has created millions of refugees.
"We must not forget that each child, each picture, represents many millions of children in danger at home — and many millions of children who have left their homes," the UNICEF report noted.
Read more: UNICEF Report Finds Half of All Refugees Are Now Children - NBC News
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February 19, 2016
US firearms industry marketing guns to children says report from Violence Policy Center
NRA strikes again: marketing gun sales tochildren |
The Violence Policy Center, which aims to stop gun violence, said in its report that gun manufacturers are marketing to the youngest consumers because their primary market -- white men -- is aging.
"The
firearms industry has set its sights on America's children. Much like
the tobacco industry's search for replacement smokers, the gun industry
is seeking replacement shooters," the group said in a statement.
"Along with the hope of increased gun sales, a corollary goal of this effort is the creation of the next generation of pro-gun advocates for future political battles."
Examples of "aggressive efforts" to market to children include rifles made with plastic parts so they are easier to handle, with less weight and recoil, the report said. Some manufacturers sell firearms in a variety of kid-friendly bright colors, including pink for girls.
The report also pointed out that the firearms industry and its lobby want parents to let their children "access guns at the earliest possible age."
The National Rifle Association, the main gun lobby in the US, previously had a website for its junior members, divided into "Under 8" and "8 and Up," the Violence Policy Center said.
Now called "NRA Family," the website's content includes a 2014 article reviewing the Thompson/Center HotShot youth rifle, calling it "a tiny gun intended for the very youngest shooters -- the ultimate first gun."
The article cited the manufacturer as saying the rifle is targeted to kids aged six to 12.
Gun violence is rife in the US, where a third of children live in a household with at least one weapon, according to the group Everytown for Gun Safety. Its statistics show that seven children and teens are killed with guns in the US on an average day.
Read more: Flash - US firearms industry marketing to children: report - France 24
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