Journey of Transition Toolkit
Toolkit Home | Learning | Assessing the Context for Transition
Understanding International Standards
International standards, based on a large body of global evidence, recognize that every child has a right to family. These standards guide many countries’ national policies and provide a framework for supporting family-based care. The two most significant sets of standards—the United Nations (UN) Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children, and the 2019 UN General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution on the Rights of the Child—offer core principles for the care and protection of children and place limits on the use of residential care.
Understanding National Policies
A child protection system is the comprehensive set of laws, policies, procedures, and practices designed to ensure the care and protection of children, through both preventive measures and effective responses to allegations of child abuse, neglect, and exploitation. In many countries a child protection system exists and provides services in conjunction with health, education, and social services. Understanding a country’s child protection system, and working in partnership with the government whenever possible, are vital to ensuring legal compliance and also help identify any government services or resources that can be utilized in the transition process. Country-level data and information about child protection policies are typically obtainable from government entities, although availability varies from one country to the next.
It is important to understand the national context because in many places there is an implementation gap in services at the local level that is often filled by nongovernmental and community-based organizations.
Assessing the Local Context
Successfully transitioning children from residential care into families and communities requires mapping and assessing the community-level assets and risks faced by children, the specific causes of family separation, and the services already in place that will help meet children’s needs, strengthen families, and support family care within the local community. A thorough assessment helps an organization develop its vision and plan to address gaps in the provision of family-strengthening services, while building key community partnerships (e.g., with local leaders, churches, and community-based service providers) that can contribute to a successful transition.
At this stage, community members can work together to begin to identify local assets and strengths that can be utilized and built upon to address the issues impacting the lives of children and families.
