Towards universal social protection for children: Achieving SDG 1.3 ILO-UNICEF Joint Report on Social Protection for Children Ian Orton.. [et al.]; pref. Alexandra Yuster, Isabel Ortiz



362.7 / T737u 2019

Towards universal social protection for children: Achieving SDG 1.3 ILO-UNICEF Joint Report on Social Protection for Children: Ian Orton.. [et al.]; pref. Alexandra Yuster, Isabel Ortiz . -- Nueva York: OIT: UNICEF, 2019. 46 p. : il.; 28 cm.

For UNICEF the research and writing of this report was led by Ian Orton, Dominic Richardson and David Stewart, with additional research, inputs, comments and advice from: Enkhzul Altangerel, Carolina Aulicino, Joanne Bosworth, Victor Cebotari, Enrique Delamónica, Solrun Engilbertsdottir, Pia Marie Helena Fagerstrom, Najme Kishani Farahani, Atif Khurshid, Nupur Kukrety, Antara Lahiri, Yukie Mokuo, Enkhnasan Nasan-Ulzii, Tia Maria Palermo, Amber Peterman, Gulsana Turusbekova, Sebastian Waisgrais and Alexandra Yuster. For the ILO, inputs to the report were provided by Isabel Ortiz, Christina Behrendt, Fabio Durán Valverde, Veronika Wodsak, Valeria Nesterenko and Zhiming Yu, as well as other colleagues who contributed to the World Social Protection Report.

Bibliografía: p. 43-46.

The challenge of child poverty. The role of social protection in addressing child poverty and socio-economic vulnerabilities. Building social protection systems for children: Towards universal coverage. Child and family cash benefit programmes anchored in national legislation. The potential of universal child grants and quasi-universal child grants to reach universal coverage for children. Effective social protection coverage for children. Recent trends in social protection for children and universality. Financing social protection: Investing in children. Combining cash benefits with in-kind benefits, childcare and other social services. Towards universal child grants in risk-prone, fragile and forced displacement contexts.
Annexes. Case studies: The challenges and possibilities of implementing universal child grants in practice. Annex 1. Mongolia: The oscillating fortunes of its universal child grant. Annex 2. Argentina: Reaching universal social protection for children through a mixed approach. Annex 3. Iran’s quasi-UCG emerging from the 2010 Targeted Subsidies Reform Act.Annex 4. Kyrgyzstan: The challenges of implementing a quasi-UCG.. Annex 5. Regional quasi-UCGs in India and Indonesia. Annex 6. Statistical tables.

9789280649987


Niños--Derechos sociales
Seguridad social


Durán Valverde, Fabio, (1960-)