< Back to previous page

Publication

A review of childrenU+2019s rights literature since the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Journal Contribution - Review Article

ChildrenU+2019s rights have become a significant field of study during the past decades, largely due to the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) in 1989. Today scholarly work on childrenU+2019s rights is almost inconceivable without considering the Convention as the bearer of the childrenU+2019s rights debate. The goal of this article is to critically explore academic work on the UNCRC. By means of a discourse analysis of international literature, academic discourse on childrenU+2019s rights is mapped. Three themes are identified that are predominantly present in academic work on the UNCRC: (1) autonomy and participation rights as the new norm in child rights practice an policy; (2) childrenU+2019s rights versus parental rights and (3) the global childrenU+2019s rights industry. That these three themes distinguish contemporary scholarly work on the UNCRC might not be a coincidence, analyzed from the process of U+201CeducationalisationU+201D, characterizing childhood in western societies since the nineteenth century. The perspective of educationalisation presents a contemporary research agenda for childrenU+2019s rights for the coming decades.
Journal: CHILDHOOD-A GLOBAL JOURNAL OF CHILD RESEARCH
ISSN: 1461-7013
Issue: 4
Volume: 16
Pages: 518 - 534
Publication year:2009