Achieving Global Goals requires more than business as usual

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA – 7 September 2016: ChildFund Australia is one of twenty organisations which have pledged their commitment to implementing the Global Goals for Sustainable Development (SDGs) in Australia, supporting the SDGs in our region, and championing the Goals around the world.

In a Civil Society Statement launched at the Australian SDGs Summit today, the signatory organisations stated: “The SDGs are ambitious and ‘business as usual’ will not be enough. Achieving the goals will require all stakeholders to play their part — governments, civil society and business — and to collaborate as never before.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has committed Australia’s support to the SDGs, which include new targets to end extreme poverty, fight inequality and fix climate change.

In order to achieve the targets in Australia, the undersigned organisations have called for the SDGs to be embedded in all relevant policies, programs and service delivery work, with the establishment of targets and monitoring procedures to enable Australia to report on its progress between now and 2030.

At a global level, the organisations have agreed to uphold and advocate for the guiding principles that inform the SDGs. Nigel Spence, CEO of ChildFund Australia, said:  “This includes ensuring that we leave no one behind, by focusing on the poorest and most marginalised members of society. As a child-focused development agency, we understand too well that often the most vulnerable members of society are children.”

“Children’s rights, in many parts of the globe, continue to be unrealised, so we welcome the SDGs for addressing a range of child protection issues through targets on violence, education, child labour, gender equality and birth registration.”

The statement also emphasises the important contribution Australia can make in achieving the targets, both at home and within our region: “We as Civil Society recognise the positive efforts being undertaken towards sustainable development, and our responsibility to play a leadership role. It is our collective aim that Australia is seen as a global leader on Sustainable Development.”

ChildFund Australia, as a member of the ReThink Orphanages network, is calling on Australians to think twice about donating to overseas orphanages, and instead consider funding those programs which enable children to grow up in family environments.

Currently, up to eight million children live in orphanages or residential care institutions around the world. This is despite the fact that around 80 per cent of these children have parents or extended family members that could care for them if given the appropriate levels of support.

ChildFund Australia‰s Child Protection Advisor, Mark Kavenagh, says: ‰In many countries where ChildFund Australia works, the institutionalisation of children is actually being driven by well-meaning but uninformed donors and volunteers.

‰When residential care is used as a solution to education, poverty and disability-based challenges, it incentivises family separation for parents who desire to give their children the best opportunities. It‰s essential that we find solutions to these challenges that allow children to grow up in their families and communities.‰

ReThink Orphanages has the support of Senator Linda Reynolds, who recently took part in an MP Learning Visit to Cambodia. She has warned Australians seeking to help Cambodian orphanages to proceed with caution, and ensure they are not unwittingly taking part in orphanage tourism‰.

She said: ‰In Australia we know the negative physical and mental impacts of children in residential care we should not be supporting these institutions overseas when community-based options are available.‰

ReThink Orphanages is working alongside Senator Reynolds and other key stakeholders from government, aid and development, education and tourism to advocate for change, and encourage Australians to support vulnerable children in ways that prevent more children being pushed into residential care.

Mark adds: ‰Research shows that living in an institutional environment has a negative impact on a childs cognitive, social and emotional development. That is why ChildFund‰s work is focused on supporting children within the context of their parents, extended relatives and local community. We believe it is important that, wherever possible, we uphold a child‰s right to grow up within a family.‰