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7 Int'l J. Child. Rts. 171 (1999)
The Impact of Children's Rights Education: A Canadian Study

handle is hein.journals/intjchrb7 and id is 181 raw text is: LA The International Journal of Children's Rights 7: 171 183, 1999.  171
FOR C 1999 Kluwer Law International. Printed in the Netherlands.
The impact of children's rights education: A Canadian study
KATHERINE COVELL and R. BRIAN HOWE
Children's Rights Center University College of Cape Breton, Canada BIP 6L2
Children's rights education in Canada is important not only for legal reasons
but also for its potential in increasing rights-respecting attitudes and behavi-
ours. Under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, like
all signatories, Canada is obligated legally to take measures to increase public
awareness of children's rights as described in the Convention. According to
Article 42 of the Convention, state parties are to make the principles and
provisions of the Convention widely known, by appropriate and active means,
to adults and children alike (Multiculturalism and Citizenship Canada
1991). A key means to make children aware of the Convention (and indirectly
adults) is through education in Canadian schools. However, apart from indi-
vidual schools, this has not been done systematically. In reviewing Canada's
1994 report, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child noted this short-
coming and recommended that Canada increase public awareness of the
Convention by incorporating the rights of the Convention into the school
curricula... (United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child 1995).
Apart from Canada's legal obligations, children's rights education is
important for another reason. It has the potential for increasing favourable
human rights attitudes and behaviours. In a 1993-94 study by Decoene and
De Cock in Bruges, Belgium, a linkage was found between exposure of
children to a children's rights education programme and increased support
for the general values of rights, tolerance, and multiculturalism (Decoene
and De Cock 1996). During the course of learning about their rights over
a school year, a group of children ages 3 to 12 spontaneously asked questions
and raised issues concerning not only their own rights but also the rights of
others, the value of tolerance, and respect for diversity. Decoene and De Cock
(1996) reported that the participating children displayed considerable sensi-
tivity to the general themes of peace and justice, and that their teachers noted
among them increased behavioural acceptance of other children and mutual
respect. What the study suggests is a contagion effect. When children feel
empowered through learning about their own rights, they become more aware
of and more supportive of the rights of others.

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