Children's Human Rights: Progress and Challenges for Children Worldwide
By (Author) Mark Ensalaco
Edited by Linda C. Majka
Contributions by Joyce Apsel
Contributions by Jaro Bilocerkowycz
Contributions by Raymond L. Fitz
Contributions by Jill Marie Gerschutz
Contributions by Mary B. Geske
Contributions by Margaret P. Karns
Contributions by Ursula Kilkelly
Contributions by Laura M. Leming
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
16th June 2005
United States
General
Non Fiction
International relations
Child abuse
362.76
Paperback
288
Width 155mm, Height 232mm, Spine 15mm
392g
Children's human rights are regularly violated around the world. Child soldiers, child slavery, and child prostitution are some of the more graphic examples this books deals with, but hungry, sick, and orphaned children are equally at risk and more prevalent. In the United States, children suffer similar abuses, but some are unique to the United States justice system. Unlike most of the rest of the world, the U.S. is a well-developed western nation in which juvenile offenders can be tried as adults and subjected to capital punishment. This book brings together a wide array of original essays from a variety of academic and practitioner perspectives on human rights and the status of children. The details are disturbing; the message, powerful: We must vigorously extend the universal declaration of human rights to the most vulnerable humans of all - the children of the world, starting at home in the United States.
Recommendeddddd * Choice Reviews *
The book, co-edited by Mark Ensalaco, director of international studies and human rights program, and Linda Majka, a sociology professor, shows the global effect of poverty, trafficking, illegal child labor and the United Nations' Convention on the Rights of the Child. * The Catholic Telegraph *
Recommended * Choice Reviews *
Mark Ensalaco is associate professor of political science at the University of Dayton. He is director of the University of Dayton's International Studies and Human Rights Programs, and is co-founder and director of the International Human Rights Education Consortium. He is the author of Chile Under Pinochet: Recovering the Truth and is completing its sequel, The Mark of Cain: The Prosecution of Pinochet.
Linda C. Majka is professor of sociology at the University of Dayton. Her research on child labor in U.S. agriculture is an extension of her historical studies on the farm labor market and unions. She co-authored Farm Workers, Agribusiness, and the State, and co-edited Families and Economic Distress. She has contributed articles, chapters and review essays to a variety of publications on social problems, labor and employment, and families. Her teaching interests concern social inequality, gender and family policy. She is active in the Ethnic and Cultural Diversity Caucus, a multicultural initiative in the Dayton community.