Short version of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child
Article 1
Definition of a Child
A child is recognized as a person under 18, unless national
laws recognize the age of majority earlier.
Article 2
Non-Discrimination
All rights apply to all children without exception. It is
the State’s obligation to protect children from any form of
discrimination and to take positive action to promote their rights.
Article 3
Best interests of the child
All actions concerning the child shall take full account of
his or her best interests. The State shall provide the child with
adequate care when parents, or others charged with that
responsibility, fail to do so.
Article 4
Implementation of rights
The State must do all it can to implement the rights
contained in the Convention.
Article 5
Parental guidance and the child’s evolving capacities
The State must respect the rights and responsibilities of
parents and the extended family to provide guidance for which is
appropriate to his or her evolving capacities.
Article
6
Survival and development
Every child has the inherent right to life, and the State
has an obligation to ensure the child’s survival and development.
Article 7
Name and nationality
The child has the right to a name at birth. The child also has
the right to acquire a nationality and, as far as possible, to know
his or her parents and be cared for by them.
Article 8
Preservation of identity
The State has an obligation to protect, and if necessary,
re-establish basic aspects of the child’s identity. This includes
name, nationality and family ties.
Article 9
Separation from parents
The child has a right to live with his or her parents unless
this is deemed to be incompatible with the child’s best interests.
The child also has the right to maintain contact with both parents
if separated from one or both.
Article 10
Family reunification
Children and their parents have the right to leave any
country and to enter their own for purposes of reunion or the
maintenance of the child-parent relationship.
Article 11
Illicit transfer and non-return
The State has an obligation to prevent and remedy the
kidnapping or retention of children abroad by a parent or third
party.
Article 12
The child’s opinion
The child has the right to express his or her opinion freely
and to have that opinion taken into account in any matter or
procedure affecting the child.
Article 13
Freedom of expression
The child has the right to express his or her views, obtain
information, make ideas or information known, regardless of
frontiers.
Article 14
Freedom of thought, conscience and religion
The State shall respect the child’s right to freedom of
thought, conscience and religion, subject to appropriate parental
guidance.
Article 15
Freedom of association
Children have a right to meet with others, and to join or
form associations.
Article 16
Protection of privacy
Children have the right to protection from interference with
privacy, family, home and correspondence, and from libel or slander.
Article 17
Access to appropriate information
The State shall ensure the accessibility to children of
information and material from a diversity of sources, and it shall
encourage the mass media to disseminate information which is of
social and cultural benefit to the child, and take steps to protect
him or her from harmful materials.
Article 18
Parental responsibilities
Parents have joint primary responsibility for raising the
child, and the State shall support them in this. The State shall
provide appropriate assistance to parents in child-raising.
Article 19
Protection from abuse and neglect
The State shall protect the child from all forms of
maltreatment by parents or others responsible for the care of the
child and establish appropriate programmes for the prevention of
abuse and the treatment of victims.
Article 20
Protection of a child without family
The State is obliged to provide special protection for a
child deprived of the family environment and to ensure that
appropriate alternative family care or institutional placement is
available in such cases. Efforts to meet this obligation shall pay
due regard to the child’s cultural background.
Article 21
Adoption
In countries where adoption is recognized and/or allowed, it
shall only be carried out in the best interests of the child, and
only with the authorization of competent authorities, and safeguards
for the child.
Article 22
Refugee children
Special protection shall be granted to a refugee child or to
a child seeking refugee status. It is the State’s obligation to
co-operate with competent organizations which provide such
protection and assistance.
Article 23
Disabled children
A disabled child has the right to special care, education
and training to help him or her enjoy a full and decent life in
dignity and achieve the greatest degree of self-reliance and social
integration possible.
Article 24
Health and health services
The child has a right to the highest standard of health and
medical care attainable. States shall place special emphasis on the
provision of primary and preventive health care, public health
education and the reduction of infant mortality. They shall
encourage international co-operation in this regard and strive to
see that no child is deprived of access to effective health
services.
Article 25
Periodic review of placement
A child who is placed by the State for reasons of care,
protection or treatment is entitled to have that placement evaluated
regularly.
Article 26
Social security
The child has the right to benefit from social security
including social insurance.
Article 27
Standard of living
Every child has the right to a standard of living adequate
for the child's physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social
development. Parents have the primary responsibility to ensure that
the child has adequate standard of living. The State’s duty is to
ensure that this responsibility can be fulfilled, and is. State
responsibility can include material assistance to parents and their
children.
Article 28
Education
The child has a right to education, and the State’s duty is
to ensure that primary education is free and compulsory, to
encourage different forms of secondary education accessible to every
child and to make higher education available to all on the basis of
capacity. School discipline shall be consistent with the child’s
right and dignity. The State shall engage in international
co-operation to implement this right.
Article 29
Aims of education
Education shall aim at developing the child’s personality,
talents and mental and physical abilities to the fullest extent.
Education shall prepare the child for an active adult life in a free
society and foster respect for the child’s parents, his or her own
cultural identity, language and values, and for the cultural
background and values of others.
Article 30
Children of minorities or indigenous populations
Children of minority communities and indigenous populations
have the right to enjoy their own culture and to practice their own
religion and language.
Article 31
Leisure, recreation and cultural activities
The child has the right to leisure, play and participation
in cultural and artistic activities.
Article 32
Child labour
The child has the right to be protected from work that
threatens his or her health, education or development. The State
shall set minimum ages for employment and regulate working
conditions.
Article 33
Drug abuse
Children have the right to protection from the use of
narcotic and psychotropic drugs, and from being involved in their
production or distribution.
Article 34
Sexual exploitation
The State shall protect children from sexual exploitation
and abuse, including prostitution and involvement in pornography.
Article 35
Sale, trafficking and abduction
It is the State’s obligation to make every effort to prevent
the sale, trafficking and abduction of children.
Article 36
Other forms of exploitation
The child has the right to protection from all forms of
exploitation to any aspects of the child’s welfare not covered in
articles 32, 33, 34 and 35.
Article 37
Torture and deprivation of liberty
No child shall be subjected to torture, cruel treatment or
punishment, unlawful arrest or deprivation of liberty. Both capital
punishment and life imprisonment without the possibility of release
are prohibited for offences committed by persons below 18 years. Any
child deprived of liberty shall be separated from adults unless it
is considered in the child’s best interests not to do so. A child
who is detained shall have legal and other assistance as well as
contact with the family.
Article 38
Armed conflicts
States Parties shall take all feasible measures to ensure
that children below 15 years of age have no direct part in
hostilities. No child below 15 shall be recruited into the armed
forces. States shall also ensure the protection and care of children
who are affected by armed conflict as described in relevant
international law.
Article 39
Rehabilitative care
The State has an obligation to ensure that child victims of
armed conflicts, torture, neglect, maltreatment or exploitation
receive appropriate treatment for their recovery and social
re-integration.
Article 40
Administration of juvenile justice
A child in conflict with the law has the right to treatment
which promotes the child’s sense of dignity and worth, takes the
child’s age into account and aims at his or her re-integration into
society. The child is entitled to basic guarantees as well as legal
or other assistance for his or her defence. Judicial proceedings and
institutional placements shall be avoided wherever possible.
Article
41
Respect for existing standards
Wherever standards set in applicable national and
international law relevant to the rights of the child are higher
than those in this Convention, the higher standard shall always
apply.
Article 42-54
Implementation and entry into force
The provisions of articles 42-54 notably foresee;
- the State’s obligation to make the
rights contained in this Convention widely known to both adults and
children.
- the setting up of a Committee on the
Rights of the child composed of ten experts, which will consider
reports that States Parties to the Convention are to submit two
years after ratification and every five years thereafter. The
Convention enters into force - and the Committee would therefore be
set up - once 20 countries have ratified it.
- States Parties are to make their
reports widely available to the general public.
- the Committee may propose that
special studies be undertaken on specific issues relating to the
rights of the child, and may make its evaluations known to each
State Party concerned as well as to the un General Assembly.
- in order to “foster the effective
implementation of the Convention and to encourage international
co-operation”, the specialized agencies of the un (such as ILO, WHO
and UNESCO) and UNICEF would be able to attend the meetings of the
Committee. Together with any other body recognized as “competent”,
including NGOs in consultative status with the un and un organs such
as UNHCR, they can submit pertinent information to the Committee and
be asked to advise on the optimal implementation of the Convention.
- a reservation incompatible with the
object and purpose of the present Convention shall not be permitted.