Promoting Synergies between Child Protection and Social Protection in Nigeria

Type Report
Title Promoting Synergies between Child Protection and Social Protection in Nigeria
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2012
URL http://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/7579.pdf
Abstract
Building social protection to reduce risks related to developmental and life-cycle vulnerabilities
is crucial, particularly in developing country contexts. This is increasingly reflected in the focus
on child health, education and nutrition in social transfer programmes globally and in the childsensitive
focus of many of the Millennium Development Goals. Social protection strategies and
policy frameworks have, however, to a great extent neglected the social sources of risk in the
context of high rates of poverty and vulnerability. In Nigeria, where child protection issues are
a key concern, important gaps exist in relation to national policy on social assistance provision
for vulnerable children: although child protection is one of four key pillars of the national social
protection strategy, the strategy is poorly resourced and implemented. Accordingly this report
is informed by a transformative social protection conceptual framework which aims to identify
policy and programming gaps and offer recommendations on how the country can implement
its national development and social protection strategies to be more responsive to children‘s
protection vulnerabilities.
Drawing on secondary literature along with primary qualitative data collected from four statelevel
sites (Adamawa, Benue, Edo and Lagos) the report focuses on linkages between child
protection and social protection services regarding three key child protection deficits: child
trafficking; harmful forms of child labour; and child domestic abuse. These three issues were
selected on account of the international evidence base documenting linkages between social
protection initiatives and these child protection deprivations.

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