Driving positive change for street-connected children
How we're creating a better world for vulnerable children and young people
Home > Our Work > Driving positive change for street-connected children
Extending our influence
We work with governments, civil society and transport communities to strengthen policies and child protection systems so that street-connected children are found, supported, and placed into a loving family home.
Building impactful change
Through advocating for children and their families and strengthening our evidence base, we can ensure our support is effective, far-reaching and, crucially, stable.
We know we can’t build sustainable, impactful change at the scale it’s needed on our own. By working with others and providing evidence of best practice, we can enable our approaches to be replicated at scale, so that more children are protected in more places.
We aim to build alliances with others in the charity and development sector, in industry and in government, to make the case for robust policies that ensure vulnerable children and young people are seen, heard and protected. We lobby for additional funding to invest in effective practice so that all children can be raised in a safe and loving family.
Latest advocacy campaigns & stories
Policing restrictions: Ask the government to protect children at risk on the rail network
The British Transport Police’s recent funding shortfall could put young people at risk on the railways. Ask your MP to ensure no child is left behind as a result.
Tanzania win: New national guidance for supporting at-risk children
We've successfully launched national guidelines for supporting vulnerable people in Tanzania, designed by Railway Children Africa in collaboration with the government.
UK aid cuts will be “devastating” for world’s most vulnerable children
Huge cuts to UK overseas aid put millions of children at risk of extreme poverty, homelessness and exploitation. Join us in asking the government to reverse its decision.
Our teams in Tanzania, India and the UK, work both together and individually to influence change for street-connected children and young people.
1. Supporting children in transport hubs before they reach the streets
Vulnerable children and young people often use public transport to run away from abuse or exploitation.
So, it’s crucial that rail and bus networks have measures in place to identify those children at-risk and take steps to protect them before they come to serious harm.
That’s why we’re pushing for safeguarding principles and interventions to be brought into train stations and bus terminals worldwide.
2. Strengthening child protection laws and care systems
Street-connected children are often left out of child-protection policies, which is how they end up slipping through gapsin protective systems.
When the system does intervene, it’s common for them to be immediately placed in unsafe, overcrowded care facilities, regardless of their needs.
At Railway Children, we’re advocating for street-connected children to be included in national, regional, and global policies on child protection and care reform. And we’re working with others in the care reform movement to create a world where every child can grow up in a loving, family-based environment.
Our approach focuses ongathering evidence to showwhy and how ourprogrammes workand sharing models of best practice.
Demonstrating the benefits of our programmes enables others to replicate them across different systems nationally and globally.
We build relationships with decision-makers at local, national, regional and international levelsto influencelasting change for street-connected children.
Political neutralityallows us toengage constructively with people acrossthe political spectrum.
Children’s voices and experiences are at the heart of all of our work. We give them frequent opportunities to feed in on the change they want to see.
Not only do we champion young people’s voices, we actively empower them to speak to powerdirectly and lead meaningful change for themselves and their communities.
We are guided by the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) and General Comment N. 21 on Children in Street Situations, which promotes adopting a child-rights-based approach in engaging with street-connected children and young people.
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