The Situation of Street Children in Selected Cities of South Sudan: Magnitude, Causes, and Effects

Country
South Sudan
Region
Africa Central Africa
Language
English
Year Published
2015
Author
B Tefera
Organisation
No data
Topics
Poverty Research, data collection and evidence Social connections / Family
Summary

This article is published in Eastern Africa Social Science Research Review. The author has made a version available to read online.

Although international declarations upholding children’s rights for survival and development were already enshrined in the domestic laws and policies of South Sudan, the reality on the ground appears to depict that scores of children in streets are as yet most marginalized and least investigated. The objectives of this study were to examine the magnitude, causes and effects of child streetism in six state capitals of South Sudan and suggest the way forward. Data on magnitude were collected using a Child Inventory Form. Then, a Child Questionnaire was administered to a sample of 756 street children. Findings indicated that child streetism was only emerging but growing at an alarming rate. The possible factors included war-induced displacement, family disruption, economic constraints, mistreatment at home, lack of access to education and childrelated behavioural factors. Once in the street, children were also found exposed to a living arrangement deprived of parental supervision and support, disruption of developmentally-constructive routines, substance abuse and health concerns. In fact, the impacts were far from uniform and not all about “negatives”.

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