Children and Youth
Foilsithe: 7 Lúnasa 2019
Ó An Roinn Leanaí, Comhionannais, Míchumais, Lánpháirtíochta agus Óige
Teanga: Níl leagan Gaeilge den mhír seo ar fáil.
Foilsithe: 7 Lúnasa 2019
Ó An Roinn Leanaí, Comhionannais, Míchumais, Lánpháirtíochta agus Óige
Teanga: Níl leagan Gaeilge den mhír seo ar fáil.
The government aims to improve outcomes for children and young people and make Ireland one of the best countries in which to grow up and raise a family.
The strategic objectives of the government include:
The new National Childcare Scheme opened on 20 November 2019. The scheme provides both universal and income-related subsidies to help parents meet the cost of quality childcare.
A universal two-year pre-school programme called Early Childhood Care and Education Programme (ECCE) is available to all children within a certain age range. It provides children with their first formal experience of early learning before they start primary school.
The Better Start Access and Inclusion Model (AIM) core goal is to promote inclusion and to ensure that children with disabilities can meaningfully participate in the free pre-school Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) programme in mainstream pre-school settings. To achieve this goal one of its main objectives is to empower pre-school providers to deliver an inclusive pre-school experience. This ensures that every eligible child can fully participate in the ECCE programme and reap the benefits of early years care and education.
AIM is a child-centred model, with a range of universal and targeted supports. It offers tailored, practical supports based on need and does not require a formal diagnosis of disability
Supporting Parents is a national model for parenting support services, which takes a whole-of-government approach to improving supports for parenting. It follows a commitment in First 5 to improve existing parenting supports provided across a range of government departments and State agencies, through the development of a national model.
The vision of Supporting Parents is for all parents to be confident and capable in their parenting role, helping to achieve the best outcomes for children and families.
Read more about Supporting Parents here .
The Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth provides strategic oversight and policy direction for the Children and Young People’s Services Committee (or CYPSC) initiative. There are 27 CYPSC across the country, mostly aligned with local authority areas. CYPSC support inter-agency co-ordination and collaboration to help achieve the best outcomes for all children and young people in their area.
Each CYPSC works towards the five national outcomes as set out in Better Outcomes, Brighter Futures – the National Policy Framework for Children and Young People (2014-2020).
These are:
• Active and healthy with physical and mental well-being,
• Achieving full potential in all areas of learning and development,
• Safe and protected from harm,
• Economic security and opportunity,
• Connected, respected and contributing to their world.
Over the past number of years, there has been significant attention paid to the delivery of child welfare and protection services in Ireland.
The government is responsible for developing the policy and legislative framework in relation to these services. It also has oversight of Tusla regarding the implementation of this policy and the effective delivery of services. Tusla has a primary responsibility to promote the safety and well-being of children.
There has been a move towards developing family and community support initiatives in order to identify and address problems at an early stage within the context of the family, while at the same time ensuring high quality care services for any child who cannot remain at home.
The Child Care Act 1991 sets out the law in relation to the care of children, particularly children who have been ill-treated, neglected or abused, or who are at risk.
The Act places a statutory duty on Tusla to:
The Act also enables the Courts to place a child in Tusla's care or under Tusla's supervision when that child has been ill-treated, neglected or abused or is at risk of such.
If Tusla is concerned that a child is not being looked after properly, a variety of supports may be offered to the parents to enable them to adequately care for their child.
This could include support from:
There is an overall mission to provide out of school supports to young people in their local communities. This enables them to overcome adverse circumstances and achieve their full potential by strengthening their personal and social competencies.
This is done by:
Funding of the Youth Services Provision aims to work alongside formal education in order to engage young people from 10-24 years of age to realise their maximum potential. This is done by respecting their rights and hearing their voices, while protecting and supporting them as they transition from childhood to adulthood.
The government's mission is to create a safer society by working in partnership to reduce youth offending through appropriate interventions and linkages into services.
The Irish Youth Justice Service's objective is to improve delivery of youth justice services and reduce youth offending. This challenge is met by focusing on diversion, rehabilitation, and the greater use of community-based interventions and the promotion of initiatives to deal with young people who offend.
Providing a safe and secure environment for detained children and supporting their early re-integration back into the community is also a key aim.
The Irish Youth Justice Service is focused on implementing the ‘Tackling Youth Crime’; Youth Justice Action Plan 2014-2018.
The Plan sits within the National Policy Framework, Better Outcomes Brighter Futures, for children and young people.
Oberstown Children Detention Campus in Lusk, Co. Dublin provides detention places to the Courts for girls and boys up to the age of 18 years ordered to be remanded or committed on criminal charges. Please see here for Oberstown Children Detention Campus response to Covid-19.
The government ensures that children and young people have a voice in the design, delivery and monitoring of services and policies that affect their lives, at national and local level.
This is undertaken through:
One of the national outcomes in Better Outcomes Brighter Futures, the national policy framework for children and young people, is the active and healthy physical and mental wellbeing of all children.
This outcome requires initiatives that enable children to enjoy play, recreation, sport, arts culture and nature, which is in conjunction with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child .
The Creative Ireland Programme was launched as the government's legacy programme arising out of the Ireland 2016 Centenary Programme. It was the main implementation vehicle for the priorities identified in Culture 2025.
The Creative Ireland Programme is a 5-year initiative, from 2017 to 2022 (building up to the centenary of the foundation of the State), which aims to place creativity at the centre of public policy. Including the voice of the child in programme development and delivery is an underlying principle of the programme.
It is designed to mainstream creativity in the life of the nation so that individually and collectively, Irish people can realise their full, creative potential.
The LGBTI+ National Youth Strategy 2018-2020 was published on 29 June, 2018 and is a world first. It was a key commitment for the Department as part of the 2016 Programme for Partnership Government.
The strategy is making a significant contribution towards the government’s broader commitment to continue to strive to ensure all LGBTI+ young people are visable, valued and included in Irish society.
The First Annual Report on the implementation of the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Intersex (LGBTI+) National Youth Strategy 2018–2020 was published on 24 October 2019.