Rehabilitating child soldiers
Context
The social cost of child soldiers is very high. These children are not gaining an education, skills, or any knowledge that they would normally acquire by staying with their families. Instead, they learned how to use a gun. One of the negative results of the phenomenon of child soldiers is an increase in armed robberies in the affected societies.
The problem of child soldiers is not a merely military or patriotic issue, but also a matter of exploitation and poverty. Irrespective of the method of recruitment, child soldiers very often come from the poor and disadvantaged groups of society with lower educational prospects or from groups with disrupted or non-existent family backgrounds. Child soldiers are not all boys; there are also girls. In addition to being involved in combat and suffering the same treatment as boys, girl soldiers were very much at risk of sexual violence and exploitation, AIDS and unwanted pregnancy.
Broader
Facilitated by
Related
Problem
SDG
Metadata
Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
Content quality
Yet to rate
Language
English
Last update
Dec 3, 2024