TY - JOUR
PY - 2023//
TI - Child-led resistance in the streets of the global south: decolonial perspectives of violence against children outside of family care
JO - Child abuse and neglect
A1 - Ritterbusch, Amy E.
A1 - LiƩvano-Karim, Laura
A1 - Budker, Rachel
A1 - Meyer, Sarah R.
A1 - Boothby, Neil
A1 - Mugumya, Firminus
A1 - Bangirana, Clare
A1 - Opobo, Timothy
A1 - Ampumuza, Doreen
A1 - Bosco Apota, John
A1 - Mbabazi, Cate
A1 - Nabukenya, Christine
A1 - Kayongo, Adam
A1 - Ssembatya, Fred
SP - e106278
EP - e106278
VL - 143
IS -
N2 - BACKGROUND: Violence against children (VAC) remains an urgent global dilemma and researchers and policymakers alike continue to work tirelessly to devise strategies aiming to end VAC. However, the perspectives and expertise of children themselves remain underrepresented in the drafting and implementation of these strategies against VAC. This paper draws attention to the marginalization of children living outside of family care and centers their perspective.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to characterize the forms of violence experienced by children living outside the family setting in Uganda, from the perspective of children themselves. The paper seeks to position the voicing of this perspective as a form of resistance against VAC from a decolonial perspective. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: The participatory research process included a total of 94 participants in various urban study sites in Kampala, Uganda.
METHODS: The research team completed this qualitative study within a youth-driven participatory action research (YPAR) framework. Data collection techniques included interviews, focus groups, participatory visual methods and social cartography.
RESULTS: Children living outside of family care experience grave forms of emotional, physical and sexual violence. Child participants present survival strategies that can inform future research and policies on violence prevention practice.
CONCLUSIONS: The illustration of explicit violence outlined in this study represents a form of resistance children take against their perpetrators. The participatory youth researcher team urges future research and policy addressing VAC in Uganda to center these perspectives and expertise of children and adolescents in both programmatic and research initiatives aiming to end violence against children.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0145-2134 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2023.106278 ID - ref1 ER -