1 / 19

Tomorrow’s child

Tomorrow’s child. Brian Harvey, Barnardos , Tallaght , 7 th May 2009 brharvey@iol.ie. Purpose of Tomorrow’s child. Look at social trends affecting children Note: little trend data until recently What does this mean for next 10-15 years?

fulton-carr
Télécharger la présentation

Tomorrow’s child

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tomorrow’s child Brian Harvey, Barnardos, Tallaght, 7th May 2009 brharvey@iol.ie

  2. Purpose of Tomorrow’s child • Look at social trends affecting children • Note: little trend data until recently • What does this mean for next 10-15 years? • Not a policy report but does look at trends in policy, political environment • Unusually rapidly changing background 2008 Method Study of trends data Interviews with key informants

  3. A word of caution about prediction • There are the known knowns and the unknown knowns. And then there are the known unknowns. And then there are the unknown unknowns. • Donald Rumsfeld

  4. Demographic trends • Rapid population growth, driven by in-migration, may now change. • Numbers of children falling since 1981, but with a recovery turn of the century • Families are smaller • Childbirth concentrated on early to mid 30s. Parents are older now. • Traditional family remains the norm • Family patterns remarkably stable. Marriage more popular than ever.

  5. Spatial, settlement trends • Significant changes in settlement patterns • Shift of population to eastern arc • Distinct growth areas e.g. TAM, Dublin-Belfast • Children living in new homes in low-density development • Growth of apartment living, not yet for children • Car as dominant mode for children’s living patterns (school, socializing, sport etc) • Arrival of the new communities, with high skill levels and at age of family formation. • Migration peak 2007, some migrants returned. Asylum peaked 2002, bottomed out.

  6. Demography: Tomorrow’s child • Continued population growth • Live in new homes in drift to the east • Some may grow up in apartments • Environmental issues more important • No, one, even two siblings, not more • Will grow up in a stable family • Parents will both work for their lifetime • Part of a more diverse population. Migrant and intermarried families. Visibility, vulnerability of Africans.

  7. Social trends (1) • A gradually falling but high rate of child poverty, always above the adult rate • Increasing, but still low and costly level of early childhood education and care • Persistence of inequalities, under-performance in education • Girls increasingly outperform boys • Schoolchildren increasingly work • Children go to school by car

  8. Social trends (2) • Stable crime, youth crime rates • Relatively low rates of illegal drug use • Increasing securitization by government • Persistence of vulnerability for some children at extreme risk: Travellers, homeless, poor housing • Children with disability live longer, but at risk of poverty

  9. Social trends: Tomorrow’s child • More likely to get early childhood education and care, in multiple settings • If from disadvantaged group or area, will be poor • If Traveller child, a lifetime of adversity, hardship • Will study longer, to 21+ • At school, more take grinds • Will grow up in a safe environment • Will live in a new home with more personal space • Will be surveilled more

  10. Living trends (1) • Positive health, living indicators, especially in new homes, high ‘happiness’ rates • Decline in mental ill-health, except for poor • Improved father/mother sharing in households • Most children have positive experience of school • Curricula have improved, but schools still traditional values, feminization teacher force • Continued attraction of traditional subjects • Science, languages not improving • Children ambitious for careers, mobile • Widening, creative career choices

  11. Living trends (2) • One fifth of children with problem health behaviour e.g. obesity, alcohol, smoking • Children high users of new technologies • Have colonized distinct areas (web2) • Follow parental political choices. Religious behaviour moving to continental norm. Few statements of secularization exc. marriage (22%) • Immigrant children highly motivated at school, endure racism, role of teachers • Irish and European sense of identity

  12. Living: Tomorrow’s child • Will grow up in a more shared, democratic home • May go to wider range of schools (multi-denominational, gaelscoilleanna) • Will have good and improving health, unless poor • One fifth at risk of health endangerment • Increasingly use new technologies in own space • Formal religious adherence, not behaviour • Schools will be more ethnically diverse • Development of shared identities

  13. Policy trends • A low-tax, low-spend model of economic development: we have & will have inadequate services for children • Unusually low rate of social spending cf EU27 • Children’s strategies proposed 1970 • Policies, architecture not set in place until 2000. Concept of children’s rights (constitutional amendment?). • Still serious deficits in services which put children at risk. • Model, scope, scale, cost of early childhood education and care problematical.

  14. European background • EU has exercised faint but discernible influence in driving up social standards (e.g. childcare, women, discrimination) • Ireland committed minimally to social values inherent in European project • Flexicurity debate important for shaping children’s life patterns • Ageing of Europe, then Ireland: longer working lives

  15. Europe: Tomorrow’s child • Europe will be pre-occupied with old people more than children, Ireland will follow • Work to 70+ • Start thinking pension very early • Flexicurity: many career changes, mobility, change jobs, re-train, re-skill, more self-reliant • Underlying problem of orientation: Berlin or Boston? Social services still informed by English-speaking, Atlantic model.

  16. Tomorrow’s child: surprises • No sex or religion, please. We know almost nothing about sexual behaviour, religious belief • How little school has changed. The great non-issue: mixed schooling • Many moral panics about children in areas of illegal drugs, smoking, alcohol, obesity, suicide, crime, ‘the family’, not justified by careful reading of figures, statistics • Most children have remarkably positive indicators, many good sub-trends e.g. healthy eating, exercise • This makes the poverty, hardship, lack of life chances, services for the few (20%) all the more unacceptable

  17. Tomorrow’s child: the challenge • Positive indicators dragged down by performance on child poverty, lack of services, educational outcomes, neglect, cost and availability of early childhood education • Re-defining child poverty downward: • Rate in 2006: 23.4% (relative poverty) • Rate in 2008: 7% (consistent poverty) • Rate in 2009: End of independent data

  18. Tomorrow’s child in disaster capitalism (Naomi Klein) (1) • Enormous damage from dismantling poverty, equality, childhood infrastructure. Loss of data, knowledge, know-how, legitimacy, champions. • Making ‘problem’ children invisible. • Squeeze on education, welfare budgets (esp. qualification conditions). • HSE cuts yet to come. Child protection? • Government opting for 3-year programme of cuts. Parents will pay more for children’s education from diminished budgets.

  19. Tomorrow’s child in disaster capitalism (2) • Expect a rapid rise in child poverty as unemployment reaches 500,000. • Disimprovement in social, health indicators. • No state agency to monitor or defend. • Loss of trust in government, institutions, with unpredictable political outcomes. • Conservative political alternatives. • NGOs: challenge to re-build, re-construct, re-shape, with fresh partners, a new future for Tomorrow’s child. • Thank you for your attention!

More Related