Safe to Learn Strategy 2021-2024
COVID 19 has heightened a pre-existing child’s right crisis.
COVID 19 has heightened a pre-existing child’s right crisis.
The National School Health Policy 2018 under noncommunicable diseases commits to support promotion of healthy lifestyles and implementation of interventions to reduce the modifiable risk factors for non-communicable diseases and mental health and their management within the school community.
This report highlights findings from the Happy Schools Project: Capacity Building for Learner Well-being in the Asia-Pacific (Phase II) pilots in Japan, Lao PDR and Thailand from 2018-2020.
Doté de 42 actions concrètes, le nouveau plan national d’actions du Gouvernement repose sur quatre axes: la reconnaissance des droits des personnes LGBT+; le renforcement de leur accès aux droits; la lutte contre la haine anti-LGBT+ et l’amélioration de la vie quotidienne des personnes LGBT+.
El Plan Nacional de Contingencia Educativa "Prevención de Violencias en el entorno educativo" tiene una base legal, con particular énfasis en la protección de mujeres, niñas y niños.
As education systems around the world begin to reopen, schools must be prepared to mitigate and respond to gender-based violence in and around schools, and provide support for those children who have experienced violence in the context of school closures.
In 2019, Theatre for a Change started implementing a new project in partnership with GIZ, the German government’s international development agency.
This is a summary of the findings from the report of the scoping study done in six locations in Nigeria. The aim of the study was to gather data that will support the development of a national policy on safety and security of schools in Nigeria.
The aim of these recommendations and the report more broadly is to provide guidance for the education sector in fostering an LGBT+ inclusive culture and reducing the levels of HBT bullying and language in schools in England.
On the 24th June 2019 the Minister of State for Higher Education, Mary Mitchell O’Connor convened a meeting in Dublin to review the issue of drug use in higher education.