This report makes the case for redirecting the response to HIV and AIDS to address children’s needs more effectively. Drawing on the best body of evidence yet assembled on children affected by AIDS, it shows where existing approaches have gone off track and what should now be done, how, and by whom. The report summarizes the evidence from two years of research and analysis by the Joint
Learning Initiative on Children and HIV/AIDS (JLICA).
Focusing mainly on countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, the report examines what has worked and what hasn't in the fight against HIV/AIDS, and emphasizes the need for HIV and AIDS services to be complemented with a social protection agenda, placing children front and center. Strengthening families, supporting collaborative action within communities, and securing the human capital of rising generation will be key elements in future efforts to end the HIV/AIDS crisis.
Click the link below to download the report in English. It is also available in French and Portuguese here.
This guest post comes from Chris Desmond and Linda Richter, contributors to the Joint Learning Initiative on Children and HIV/AIDS (JLICA). Among other conclusions, JLICA's final report advocates that, in countries heavily affected by HIV, the most appropriate economic strengthening action to be taken in support of children is the establishment of a social protection plan to transfer resources to the poorest families. Given the range of activities pursued in the name of improving the economic security of children affected by HIV, CYES asked Chris and Linda to discuss their findings in more detail. To learn more about JLICA and to access the report in multiple languages, visit their website at www.jlica.org.
Although there is a great deal of controversy about the relationship between poverty and the risk of becoming infected with HIV, it is not debatable that HIV and AIDS place a financial strain on affected individuals and families. Over time, and often repeated shocks, AIDS is impoverishing. Many of the impacts which occur as a result of the epidemic, particularly those which affect children, result from this financial strain. For families already facing serious economic constraints, the added burden of HIV/AIDS can push them into destitution. Budgets are further constrained, food consumption may fall, children may be withdrawn from school, and less is available to spend on the health care of children and adults who are not ill.
Economic strengthening for individuals and families is an obvious response to financial strain, and there are a range of programmes which seek to do just this. These include, in an approximate order of rising complexity in delivery: cash transfers, in-kind transfers (such as food), livelihood development, micro- credit and public works programmes, among others. Identifying the most appropriate program to protect children in the context of HIV/AIDS and poverty was a major focus of the Joint Learning Initiative on Children and AIDS (JLICA). The JLICA concluded that cash transfers for the poorest families is the optimum policy choice given need, flexibility and capacity constraints. There are two parts to the JLICA recommendation: firstly, the provision of cash transfers as opposed to other forms of economic strengthening and, secondly, the targeting of the poorest families as opposed to orphans or people living with HIV/AIDS.
There are a number of arguments in favour of cash transfers. Cash transfers are a proven means of improving the health and well-being of vulnerable families. They also require, relative to livelihoods or public works, less capacity to implement. Unlike in-kind transfers, cash provides some flexibility and avoids goods being sold by families so they can purchase what they feel they really need. Cash transfers respond to constraints in demand for services. While there is frequently a focus on the delivery of health and education services, the capacity of families to access these services has not been addressed. Perhaps most importantly, cash transfers recognise that the leading role in child care and protection is played by the family. Outside responses should support families rather than try to by-pass them.
A common objection to cash transfers is that they foster dependency. But the amounts of money involved are small and can only been seen as supportive of other forms of family income and livelihood. Even if there is dependency, it may well be legitimate. Cash transfers are typically intended to benefit children, the elderly or families affected by illness or disability with no one able to work – all of whom are legitimately dependent on their families and the state. It is curious that descriptions of old or very young caregivers of children affected by HIV/AIDS and poverty are accompanied by arguments in favour of livelihood or public works programmes, the very forms of economic strengthening of least benefit to these groups of caregivers.
The JLICA, as mentioned, recommends targeting the poorest families in HIV/AIDS affected communities. This is premised on the contention that, at the point of delivery, the only appropriate indicator of need is need itself. Families affected by HIV/AIDS may be more at risk of being pushed deeper into poverty, but this does not mean that they are all more at risk than all other families. The same applies to orphans. Needs arise because of poverty; therefore the targeting should be based on poverty. It so happens that targeting the poorest families has been shown to cover the majority of families affected by HIV/AIDS being covered.
The above summarises some of the main arguments behind the JLICA recommendations relating to cash transfers. There are, however, other important arguments in favour of cash transfers not directly related to HIV/AIDS. Key among these are the protection and promotion of human capital and their potential impact on economic growth. Far from fostering dependency, cash transfers have been shown to increase household productivity and labour force participation. Moreover, the injection of money directly into poor communities has the potential to increase economic activity which leads to benefits for others in the community, not only targeted families.
The SEEP Network's HIV & AIDS and Microenterprise Development (HAMED) Working Group is holding a weeklong online conference that addresses savings-led approaches in HIV & AIDS integrated programming. Discussion will be facilitated by HAMED members with the expert assistance of a panel of Savings-Led guest 'speakers' who will draft expert posts during the course of the weeklong conference. This conference is designed to be an open dialogue space for interested MED and public health professionals, a learning platform, and source of virtual peer review.
The W. K. Kellogg Foundation works in the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean, and southern Africa. The foundation focuses on children, and has three funding priorities: 1) Learning; 2) Food, Health, and Well-Being; and 3) Family Economic Security.
The foundation seeks proposals that have the potential to:
- Have a measurable impact on children and families who face significant barriers to opportunity for success
- Strengthen the “opportunity grid” (the systems and services) within communities that create opportunities for children
- Make significant and sustainable change
- Engage promising innovative solutions and technologies
- Work in partnership with communities, governments, businesses, and experts
- Leverage support from other sources
- Build on existing Kellogg Foundation work
Grants are awarded on an ongoing basis. Follow the link below for more details, or see the links above for region-specific information.
Working with local and institutional actors, the Project will promote the participation of the private sector, local governments, Congress, civilian police, government institutions, community and youth leaders and other actors in the implementation and oversight of key prevention policy reforms and youth-oriented prevention programs. The emphasis of this project is to strengthen community and public sector institutions by ensuring the replication of successful initiatives and the development and implementation of new ones. With this effort, USAID seeks to promote coordinated action and broad participation in crime prevention, while developing effective and comprehensive community-based strategies involving the private sector.
Over a period of five years, the Project aims to achieve the following results:
- Reduce the incidence of crime through crime prevention activities;
- Prevent and reduce the risk of youth entering into or continuing in a life of crime by improving and expanding services provided to at-risk youth;
- Promote collaborative interventions among young people, parents, community institutions, and business leaders coming together to address and meet the needs of at-risk youth;
- Strengthen and consolidate the Youth Alliance Association and other local institutions;
- Improve and expand the existing job placement network through private sector alliances, such that it remains useful and self-sustaining;
- Provide market-driven skills enhancement to youth in neighborhoods with high crime incidence and gang activity;
- Spur municipal economic development and security infrastructure development through a community action fund;
- Assist key national-level institutions and local governments to improve crime prevention services;
- Expand community-based policing; and
- Implement Mérida crime prevention-related activities for a three-year period.
Please visit link below for contact information and more details
In 2005 and 2006 UNICEF arranged for children and young people who had been trafficked while under 18 years of age to be interviewed in their home countries: Albania, Kosovo, Republic of Moldova and Romania. Based on these interviws, the UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, prepared this report to stimulate thinking and action.
The study:
- Illustrates, through concrete examples, the complexity and dynamics of child trafficking.
- Provides insight into how the children and young people perceived the assistance they were offered
- Identifies the extent to which the participating children and young people, at the time they received assistance, had been questioned about their views and given the opportunity to participate in decisions regarding their situation.
- Provides an understanding of the importance of listening to children and young people and involving them in the design and implementation of actions to prevent and address child trafficking.

