Child Care Institutions (CCIs) have often functioned within a reactive model of child protection, where action is triggered after abuse, neglect, or serious violations are reported. Although legal and statutory responses remain essential, relying solely on post-incident intervention limits the ability of institutions to prevent harm. A shift from reactive response to proactive prevention is therefore critical for ensuring children’s safety and well-being in care settings.
Proactive prevention emphasises child safeguarding as an everyday institutional responsibility rather than an emergency response. It requires integrating safety into organisational governance, staff behaviours, and routine practices. Preventive approaches focus on anticipating risks, strengthening ethical conduct, promoting child participation, and ensuring that children have safe and accessible ways to raise concerns. Regular training, clear accountability structures, and continuous risk assessment form the foundation of this approach.
For CCIs, prevention is further strengthened through periodic safeguarding reviews, child protection audits, and social audits that assess both practice and compliance with child protection laws. These mechanisms foster transparency, prompt corrective action, and a shared sense of responsibility.
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By embedding prevention within institutional culture and systems, CCIs can move beyond crisis management and create care environments that respect children’s dignity, protect their rights, and support their healthy development.

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