1 / 18

BYOUNIQUE

BYOUNIQUE. Malawi Child Justice System Program. Content. Introduction Objectives Background Project description Planning Organization Costs, revenues and funding Reporting & Control Risks and measures. Introduction.

vanida
Download Presentation

BYOUNIQUE

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. BYOUNIQUE Malawi Child Justice System Program

  2. Content • Introduction • Objectives • Background • Project description • Planning • Organization • Costs, revenues and funding • Reporting & Control • Risks and measures

  3. Introduction • Byounique is a Dutch-Malawian social enterprise specializing in personal development projects in a wide number of settings for young people in conflict with the law. • This document describes the guidance project that Byounique will start in Southern-Malawi in the Young Offenders Prison, Mikuyu to help prepare the young people in these institutions to re-integrate into society. • Byounique starts this project because it is convinced that a good re-integration gives the young people a chance for a better future and serves the community by reducing recidivism and re-offending. • The guidance project is part of a larger program that Byounique will start in Malawi aimed at helping to reach the goal of a restorative and rehabilitative Child Justice System.

  4. Objectives 2011-2012 • Execution of a Guidance Program for boys in Mikuyu Young Offenders Prison. • Delivery of a feasibility study on a Resocialization Program for young offenders in Malawi, including vocational skills training, internships, job opportunities, entrepreneurship and self-sustainability. • Delivery of a detailed Implementation Plan for the Resocialization Program. • Identification of Practical Improvements needed in Mikuyu. • Delivery of an Implementation Plan for these improvements. • Awareness building in the community on the Child Justice System.

  5. Background: MALAWI • By signing and ratifying several international human rights documents, the Malawian government has committed itself to the promotion and protection of child’s rights. • In the Constitution of the Republic of Malawi, the government aspires to advance Child Justice and Penal Reform, wanting to adopt a restorative and rehabilitative approach to child justice. • In July 2010, the Malawian government has accepted the Child (Care, Protection and Justice) Bill, aiming to increase the Care and Protection for children and young persons in Malawi. • The challenge in Malawi is to make sure that what is set out in formal laws and policies is actually implemented.

  6. Background: U.N. Convention • At least all children and young persons in conflict with the law in Malawi should be treated by the guidelines set out in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. In article 37, the Convention states on children in conflict with the law: • No child shall be subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Neither capital punishment nor life imprisonment without possibility of release shall be imposed for offences committed by persons below eighteen years of age; • No child shall be deprived of his or her liberty unlawfully or arbitrarily. The arrest, detention or imprisonment of a child shall be in conformity with the law and shall be used only as a measure of last resort and for the shortest appropriate period of time; • Every child deprived of liberty shall be treated with humanity and respect for the inherent dignity of the human person, and in a manner which takes into account the needs of persons of his or her age. In particular, every child deprived of liberty shall be separated from adults unless it is considered in the child's best interest not to do so and shall have the right to maintain contact with his or her family through correspondence and visits, save in exceptional circumstances; • Every child deprived of his or her liberty shall have the right to prompt access to legal and other appropriate assistance, as well as the right to challenge the legality of the deprivation of his or her liberty before a court or other competent, independent and impartial authority, and to a prompt decision on any such action.

  7. Background: NGO’s • Several local NGO’s are trying to help to improve the Child Justice System. Examples are Eye of the Child, YONECO and CCC Trust, who works directly in the Young Offenders Prisons. • None of them focuses merely on the Child Justice System.

  8. Background:Young Offenders Prisons • Young offenders in Malawi are detained in poor conditions and efforts to prepare them for re-integrating in society on release are limited: • Young Offenders Prisons: facilities are built for 60 boys while there are 350 boys staying there. • There is a lack of food, water, hygiene, medical support and legal support. • There is no possibility for the boys to prepare themselves for life after imprisonment. The necessities like education, skills training or guidance at reintegration are lacking. • The sentences of the boys are long and often the boys are imprisoned without any sentence (they are on remand). • There is no real evaluation system to see if a boy has changed and could qualify for probation or release. • There is hardly any contact with the families. Boys do not really know if they are welcomed home, families are not prepared for the return of a boy.

  9. Project Description: Guidance Program • Byounique will offer guidance to boys in Mikuyu, who re-integrate into the community. For a period of 12 months a trained team of social workers will: • visit the boys in Mikuyu to discuss and, if needed, revise their plans for the future, • visit the families of the boys to see if and how they can support the boys, • identify important others in the community that can support the boys and their families while returning home, like chiefs, teachers, peers, companies, etc. • invite the family at least 1 time to Mikuyu to meet their son and to see the circumstances in which he has lived, • take the boy home or closest to home possible after release, • follow-up for a period of 6 months to see how the boy is doing, • organize 2 return activities a year to Mikuyu where boys that have left can advice the boys remaining on life after discharge and could be linked to boys soon leaving as (voluntary) mentors.

  10. Project Description:Resocialization Program • The feasibility of a Resocialization program will be studied by mapping the needs, the strengths and weaknesses of: • the boys, their families, the community and the government • Various fields will be covered in the study, like: • education, • training, • living, • internships, • work projects • earning- and savings projects, • legal procedures • Together with NGO’s, Governmental departments, Companies and other local stakeholders in the community a detailed Implementation Plan will be made, including the costs and timelines to realize and implement the Resocialization program.

  11. Project Description:Practical Improvements • Practical improvements in Mikuyu will be mapped by: • Interviewing boys, social workers, wards, directors, and NGO’s to get a good idea of the most useful and necessary improvements in the prisons. • Asking quotations of local or international (building) companies and suppliers for the realization and maintenance of the proposed improvements • Together with international and local organizations and companies a detailed Implementation Plan will be made including the costs and timelines to realize and maintain the improvements.

  12. Project Description:Awareness building • Awareness building activities will be carried out in 2 areas: • Activities related to the guidance project and the implementation plans • Fundraising activities • The community and responsible professionals will be informed on the situation in the Young Offenders Prisons; the Reformatory Centres and of the Child Justice System. • The community and the professionals are invited to take responsibility to create necessary improvements by donations, volunteer work or supporting the work of Byounique in petitions or other advocacy activities, • The community and the professionals will be informed on the positive results following the improvements, for the boys and the community, both socially and economically.

  13. Planning: subprojects

  14. Planning: activities

  15. Organization

  16. Costs, Revenues and Funding • Non-financing: • (Cash Out) Expenditures: • Fixed assets • Computers, phones, • Operating expenses • Salaries, office, transport, communication, specialists, unforeseen • Fundraising activities • (Cash In) Revenues • Training of other NGOs, sales, office • Fundraising revenues • (Balance) Net Cash Flow • Financing • In cash • In kind

  17. Reporting & Control • According to international standards, a minimum of 75% of the money donated is spent immediately on project-activities. • A maximum of 25% is spent on fundraising-activities. • According to international standards, there will be full disclosure. Quarterly financial reports will be published on the internet. • The project manager reports on a monthly and quarterly basis to the Board of Trustees and head of Finance & Control (F&C). • Finance & Control is responsible for monitoring the cash flows and reporting. • The roles of head of F&C and project manager will not be combined in the same person

  18. Risks and measures

More Related