1 / 34

A comparison of child well-being in the EU 29

Jonathan Bradshaw Child ONEurope European Seminar on Child Well-being Indicators Instituto degli Innocenti Florence 29 January 2009. A comparison of child well-being in the EU 29. Background. UNICEF State of the World’s Children

ralph
Download Presentation

A comparison of child well-being in the EU 29

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jonathan Bradshaw Child ONEurope European Seminar on Child Well-being Indicators Instituto degli Innocenti Florence 29 January 2009 A comparison of child well-being in the EU 29

  2. Background • UNICEF State of the World’s Children • Cornia and Danziger (1997) Child Poverty and Deprivation in Rich Countries • UNICEF Innocenti Report Cards 1-6 • Luxembourg EU Presidency – child mainstreaming • Ben Arieh and the “Jerusalem” project • Bradshaw, J., Hoelscher, P. and Richardson, D. (2007) An index of child well-being in the European Union 25, Journal of Social Indicators Research, 80, 133-177.http://springerlink.metapress.com/content/f3642p2x00hn5h01/fulltext.pdf • UNICEF (2007) Innocenti Report Card 7 Child Poverty in Perspective: An Overview of Child Well-being in Rich Countries • Bradshaw, J. Hoelscher, P. and Richardson, D. (2007) Comparing Child Well-being in OECD Countries: Concepts and Methods, IWP 2006-03. Florence:UNICEF. http://www.unicef-icdc.org/publications/pdf/iwp2006_03_eng.pdf • Richardson, D. Hoelscher, P. and Bradshaw, J. (2008) Child well-being in Central and Eastern European Countries (CEE) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Child Ind. Res. 1: 211-250. • Bradshaw, J. and Richardson, D. (2009 An Index of Child Well-being in Europe (forthcoming)

  3. Conceptualisation of child well-being • Multi-dimensional approach • Based on children’s rights as outlined in the UN CRC • “the primary consideration in all actions concerning children must be in their best interest and their views must be taken into account” • What children think and feel is important • Aspirations • Child the unit of analysis • Well-being more important than well-becoming • Focus on outcomes not inputs • Use direct measures

  4. Data Sources for EU index 2009 • Surveys • Health Behaviour of School Aged Children (HBSC) at 2005 • Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) at 2006 • Survey of Income and Living Conditions (EU) at 2006 • Series • WHO mortality data base • World Bank World Development Indicators • OECD Health Indicators • EU Health for All Data base • OECD Education at a Glance,

  5. DOMAINS OF WELL-BEING • 43 indicators • 20 components • 7 domains

  6. DOMAINS OF WELL-BEING • Health • Subjective well-being  • Personal relationships • Material resources • Education • Behaviour and risks • Housing and the environment

  7. Child well-being: Summary

  8. Health

  9. HEALTH

  10. Subjective well-being

  11. Components of subjective well-being

  12. Relationships

  13. RELATIONSHIPS

  14. Material well-being

  15. MATERIAL WELL-BEING

  16. Risk and safety

  17. Components of risk and safety

  18. Education

  19. EDUCATION

  20. Housing and the environment

  21. Housing and the environment

  22. Background • UNICEF State of the World’s Children • Cornia and Danziger (1997) Child Poverty and Deprivation in Rich Countries • UNICEF Innocenti Report Cards 1-6 • Luxembourg EU Presidency – child mainstreaming • Ben Arieh and the “Jerusalem” project • Bradshaw, J., Hoelscher, P. and Richardson, D. (2007) An index of child well-being in the European Union 25, Journal of Social Indicators Research, 80, 133-177.http://springerlink.metapress.com/content/f3642p2x00hn5h01/fulltext.pdf • UNICEF (2007) Innocenti Report Card 7 Child Poverty in Perspective: An Overview of Child Well-being in Rich Countries • Bradshaw, J. Hoelscher, P. and Richardson, D. (2007) Comparing Child Well-being in OECD Countries: Concepts and Methods, IWP 2006-03. Florence:UNICEF. http://www.unicef-icdc.org/publications/pdf/iwp2006_03_eng.pdf • Richardson, D. Hoelscher, P. and Bradshaw, J. (2008) Child well-being in Central and Eastern European Countries (CEE) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Child Ind. Res. 1: 211-250. • Bradshaw, J. and Richardson, D. (2009 An Index of Child Well-being in Europe (forthcoming)

  23. WELL-BEING BY CHILD POVERTY RATE

  24. WELL-BEING AND LIFE SATISFACTION

  25. WELL-BEING BY FAMILY BREAKDOWN

  26. Selected ten

  27. Overall by select ten

  28. Correlations matrix of domains

  29. Child well-being by GDP Euros per capita

  30. Child well-being and inequality

  31. Overall child well-being by spending on families with children 2005 as %GDP

  32. (Self) Criticisms • Not all aspects of child well-being covered • Bias to older children • Equal weighting • Z scores • No measure of dispersion within countries

  33. Future • Innocenti report card 8 out ?9 • OECD report on child well-being coming in April 2009 • EU project on child poverty and child well-being • Also better questions in SILC from 2009

  34. Conclusions (on for example Italy) • Italy is middling/low on child well-being overall • Not good on • Well-being at school • Youth inactivity • Poverty • Education • Housing • Better on • Self defined health • Risk and safety • Weak family package • Hypotheses • Relying on strong families - which are weakening • ?Spending too much on the elderly

More Related