Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary
The objective of this study is to 1) review the situation and trends in terms of child welfare outcomes in Russia; 2) review and evaluate social policy responses; 3) identify major issues and challenges; and 4) propose policies and measures that wo...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/11/2075836/russian-federation-child-welfare-outcomes-during-1990s-case-russia-russian-federation-child-welfare-outcomes-during-1990s-case-russia-executive-summary http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15326 |
id |
okr-10986-15326 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-153262021-04-23T14:03:15Z Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary World Bank ABORTION ABORTION RATE ACCESS TO EDUCATION ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES ADVOCACY ALCOHOLICS ALCOHOLISM BIRTH RATE CARE CENTERS CARE FOR CHILDREN CASE MANAGEMENT CHILD ALLOWANCES CHILD CARE CHILD CARE SERVICES CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHILD HEALTH CHILD POVERTY CHILD PROTECTION CHILD WELFARE CHILD WELFARE OUTCOMES CHILD WELFARE POLICIES CHILD WELFARE REFORM CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM CHILDBIRTH CHILDHOOD DISEASES CHILDREN AT RISK CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES CLIMATE CRIME DECISION MAKING DEPRESSION DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILIES EARLY DETECTION EARLY STAGE OF DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION FAMILY STRUCTURES FAMILY SUPPORT FAMILY VIOLENCE FOSTER CARE FOSTER FAMILIES HEALTH HEALTH CARE HEALTH SERVICES HOMELESSNESS HYGIENE INFANT MORTALITY INSTITUTIONALIZATION INSTITUTIONALIZED CHILDREN IODINE IODINE DEFICIENCY LIVE BIRTHS LIVING STANDARDS LONG-TERM INSTITUTIONAL CARE MARKETABLE SKILLS MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH CARE MICRONUTRIENTS MORTALITY MORTALITY RATE MORTALITY RATES MOTHERS NUTRITION NUTRITION STATUS ORPHANS PARENTAL CARE PARENTAL DEATH PARENTAL NEGLECT PARENTS PHYSICAL ABUSE POOR CHILDREN PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC SERVICES RESIDENTIAL CARE RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITIES RESIDENTIAL FACILITIES RESIDENTIAL INSTITUTIONS RISK REDUCTION SAFETY SANITATION SCHOOLS SECONDARY EDUCATION SEXUAL EXPLOITATION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL EXCLUSION SOCIAL POLICY SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL PROTECTION POLICIES SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL WORK TERTIARY EDUCATION UNEMPLOYMENT VACCINATION VITAMINS VULNERABLE CHILDREN VULNERABLE GROUPS WAGES WORKERS YOUNG CHILDREN CHILD WELFARE CHILD PROTECTION CHILDREN IN POVERTY CHILDREN MORTALITY CHILDREN NUTRITION SOCIAL SAFETY NETS FAMILY POLICY POLICY FRAMEWORK FAMILY INCOME SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEMS RISK MANAGEMENT TARGETED ASSISTANCE POLICY MAKING IMPLEMENTATION ARRANGEMENTS VULNERABLE GROUPS DISABLED PERSONS CHILD DEVELOPMENT LEGAL REFORM INSTITUTIONAL REFORM EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT CHILD ABUSE QUALITY OF EDUCATION CHILD NUTRITION HOMELESS CHILDREN FAMILY WELFARE The objective of this study is to 1) review the situation and trends in terms of child welfare outcomes in Russia; 2) review and evaluate social policy responses; 3) identify major issues and challenges; and 4) propose policies and measures that would improve child well-being outcomes. The study consists of two parts. the first part reviews child welfare outcomes during the 1990s, focusing on child poverty and vulnerability, as well as health, education, and nutrition status. Chapter 2 links child well-being outcomes to the protracted economic crisis and related labor market developments, high inequality, rapid demographic and family formation changes, as well as generally insufficient, severely fiscally constrained and ineffective policy responses. Chapter 3 examines public policy responses in social protection, health and education, focusing on safety nets particularly policies targeting families and children. the second part of the study focuses on two groups of children identified as particularly vulnerable in Russia: children deprived of birth family upbringing and children with disabilities. the chapter on the former highlights their growing numbers against a continued decline in the child population, as well as the continued practice of costly, detrimental to child development and ineffective long-term institutionalization of such children. It reviews legal and institutional reforms undertaken so far and identifies challenges related to designing effective reform. 2013-08-23T18:40:02Z 2013-08-23T18:40:02Z 2002-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/11/2075836/russian-federation-child-welfare-outcomes-during-1990s-case-russia-russian-federation-child-welfare-outcomes-during-1990s-case-russia-executive-summary http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15326 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ABORTION ABORTION RATE ACCESS TO EDUCATION ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES ADVOCACY ALCOHOLICS ALCOHOLISM BIRTH RATE CARE CENTERS CARE FOR CHILDREN CASE MANAGEMENT CHILD ALLOWANCES CHILD CARE CHILD CARE SERVICES CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHILD HEALTH CHILD POVERTY CHILD PROTECTION CHILD WELFARE CHILD WELFARE OUTCOMES CHILD WELFARE POLICIES CHILD WELFARE REFORM CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM CHILDBIRTH CHILDHOOD DISEASES CHILDREN AT RISK CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES CLIMATE CRIME DECISION MAKING DEPRESSION DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILIES EARLY DETECTION EARLY STAGE OF DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION FAMILY STRUCTURES FAMILY SUPPORT FAMILY VIOLENCE FOSTER CARE FOSTER FAMILIES HEALTH HEALTH CARE HEALTH SERVICES HOMELESSNESS HYGIENE INFANT MORTALITY INSTITUTIONALIZATION INSTITUTIONALIZED CHILDREN IODINE IODINE DEFICIENCY LIVE BIRTHS LIVING STANDARDS LONG-TERM INSTITUTIONAL CARE MARKETABLE SKILLS MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH CARE MICRONUTRIENTS MORTALITY MORTALITY RATE MORTALITY RATES MOTHERS NUTRITION NUTRITION STATUS ORPHANS PARENTAL CARE PARENTAL DEATH PARENTAL NEGLECT PARENTS PHYSICAL ABUSE POOR CHILDREN PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC SERVICES RESIDENTIAL CARE RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITIES RESIDENTIAL FACILITIES RESIDENTIAL INSTITUTIONS RISK REDUCTION SAFETY SANITATION SCHOOLS SECONDARY EDUCATION SEXUAL EXPLOITATION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL EXCLUSION SOCIAL POLICY SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL PROTECTION POLICIES SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL WORK TERTIARY EDUCATION UNEMPLOYMENT VACCINATION VITAMINS VULNERABLE CHILDREN VULNERABLE GROUPS WAGES WORKERS YOUNG CHILDREN CHILD WELFARE CHILD PROTECTION CHILDREN IN POVERTY CHILDREN MORTALITY CHILDREN NUTRITION SOCIAL SAFETY NETS FAMILY POLICY POLICY FRAMEWORK FAMILY INCOME SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEMS RISK MANAGEMENT TARGETED ASSISTANCE POLICY MAKING IMPLEMENTATION ARRANGEMENTS VULNERABLE GROUPS DISABLED PERSONS CHILD DEVELOPMENT LEGAL REFORM INSTITUTIONAL REFORM EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT CHILD ABUSE QUALITY OF EDUCATION CHILD NUTRITION HOMELESS CHILDREN FAMILY WELFARE |
spellingShingle |
ABORTION ABORTION RATE ACCESS TO EDUCATION ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES ADVOCACY ALCOHOLICS ALCOHOLISM BIRTH RATE CARE CENTERS CARE FOR CHILDREN CASE MANAGEMENT CHILD ALLOWANCES CHILD CARE CHILD CARE SERVICES CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHILD HEALTH CHILD POVERTY CHILD PROTECTION CHILD WELFARE CHILD WELFARE OUTCOMES CHILD WELFARE POLICIES CHILD WELFARE REFORM CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM CHILDBIRTH CHILDHOOD DISEASES CHILDREN AT RISK CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES CLIMATE CRIME DECISION MAKING DEPRESSION DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILIES EARLY DETECTION EARLY STAGE OF DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION FAMILY STRUCTURES FAMILY SUPPORT FAMILY VIOLENCE FOSTER CARE FOSTER FAMILIES HEALTH HEALTH CARE HEALTH SERVICES HOMELESSNESS HYGIENE INFANT MORTALITY INSTITUTIONALIZATION INSTITUTIONALIZED CHILDREN IODINE IODINE DEFICIENCY LIVE BIRTHS LIVING STANDARDS LONG-TERM INSTITUTIONAL CARE MARKETABLE SKILLS MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH CARE MICRONUTRIENTS MORTALITY MORTALITY RATE MORTALITY RATES MOTHERS NUTRITION NUTRITION STATUS ORPHANS PARENTAL CARE PARENTAL DEATH PARENTAL NEGLECT PARENTS PHYSICAL ABUSE POOR CHILDREN PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC SERVICES RESIDENTIAL CARE RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITIES RESIDENTIAL FACILITIES RESIDENTIAL INSTITUTIONS RISK REDUCTION SAFETY SANITATION SCHOOLS SECONDARY EDUCATION SEXUAL EXPLOITATION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL EXCLUSION SOCIAL POLICY SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL PROTECTION POLICIES SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL WORK TERTIARY EDUCATION UNEMPLOYMENT VACCINATION VITAMINS VULNERABLE CHILDREN VULNERABLE GROUPS WAGES WORKERS YOUNG CHILDREN CHILD WELFARE CHILD PROTECTION CHILDREN IN POVERTY CHILDREN MORTALITY CHILDREN NUTRITION SOCIAL SAFETY NETS FAMILY POLICY POLICY FRAMEWORK FAMILY INCOME SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEMS RISK MANAGEMENT TARGETED ASSISTANCE POLICY MAKING IMPLEMENTATION ARRANGEMENTS VULNERABLE GROUPS DISABLED PERSONS CHILD DEVELOPMENT LEGAL REFORM INSTITUTIONAL REFORM EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT CHILD ABUSE QUALITY OF EDUCATION CHILD NUTRITION HOMELESS CHILDREN FAMILY WELFARE World Bank Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation |
description |
The objective of this study is to 1)
review the situation and trends in terms of child welfare
outcomes in Russia; 2) review and evaluate social policy
responses; 3) identify major issues and challenges; and 4)
propose policies and measures that would improve child
well-being outcomes. The study consists of two parts. the
first part reviews child welfare outcomes during the 1990s,
focusing on child poverty and vulnerability, as well as
health, education, and nutrition status. Chapter 2 links
child well-being outcomes to the protracted economic crisis
and related labor market developments, high inequality,
rapid demographic and family formation changes, as well as
generally insufficient, severely fiscally constrained and
ineffective policy responses. Chapter 3 examines public
policy responses in social protection, health and education,
focusing on safety nets particularly policies targeting
families and children. the second part of the study focuses
on two groups of children identified as particularly
vulnerable in Russia: children deprived of birth family
upbringing and children with disabilities. the chapter on
the former highlights their growing numbers against a
continued decline in the child population, as well as the
continued practice of costly, detrimental to child
development and ineffective long-term institutionalization
of such children. It reviews legal and institutional reforms
undertaken so far and identifies challenges related to
designing effective reform. |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary |
title_short |
Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary |
title_full |
Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary |
title_fullStr |
Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary |
title_full_unstemmed |
Child Welfare Outcomes During the 1990s : Voume 1. Executive Summary |
title_sort |
child welfare outcomes during the 1990s : voume 1. executive summary |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/11/2075836/russian-federation-child-welfare-outcomes-during-1990s-case-russia-russian-federation-child-welfare-outcomes-during-1990s-case-russia-executive-summary http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15326 |
_version_ |
1764426981131157504 |