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Continue reading →: From Anath to Child Rights: India’s Quiet Revolution in Protecting Vulnerable Children
For centuries in India, a child without parents was simply called “Anath,”The word carried both sorrow and compassion. It signified a child who had lost the protection of family and therefore deserved care from society. Communities, extended families, temples, and charitable institutions often stepped forward to help such children. Compassion,…
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Continue reading →: Every care leaver deserves a future.
Every child deserves the love, protection, and belonging that a family provides. A nurturing family environment supports a child’s emotional, social, and psychological development and helps build confidence, identity, and resilience. For children who cannot remain with their biological families, family-based alternatives such as adoption, foster care, or kinship care…
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Continue reading →: A Third Pathway Model: Mentorship-Based Rehabilitation for Older Adolescents
While the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015, prioritises family-based rehabilitation, older adolescents face structural constraints. Several countries have developed alternative permanency pathways for older adolescents who are unlikely to enter adoption. In India, adoption, foster care, and mentorship may need to be strategically strengthened to address…
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Continue reading →: When Care Turns into Family
In India, children in Child Care Institutions (CCIs) often hesitate to move into alternate family care due to emotional, social, and systemic realities. Under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015, institutionalisation is intended to be temporary, yet for many children, it becomes their lived stability. CCIs…
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Continue reading →: I am not alone.
When a child knows, deep inside, “I am not alone,” something tender but powerful awakens within them. The tightness in the chest slowly loosens. The silence that once felt heavy begins to soften. Fear does not disappear overnight, but it no longer feels endless. To feel accompanied — truly accompanied…
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Continue reading →: Inter-generational trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to psychological and emotional wounds that are transmitted from one generation to the next when trauma remains unaddressed. Experiences such as abandonment, neglect, violence, poverty, substance abuse, displacement, or prolonged institutionalisation alter a caregiver’s emotional responses and coping mechanisms. Children raised in such environments absorb fear, insecurity,…
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Continue reading →: Technology cannot dilute accountability.
Deepfake abuse of children in India is a grave violation of child rights and must be treated as serious abuse and sexual exploitation, not as a mere cyber offence. Digital manipulation of a child’s image, voice, or likeness into sexualised, obscene, or degrading content causes real and enduring harm. Such…
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Continue reading →: untitled post 513
Dalma is a traditional curry from Odisha, India, prepared with mixed vegetables and lentils. Cooked with minimal oil and mild seasoning, it is highly nutritious, rich in vitamins, and known for its simplicity and health benefits.
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Continue reading →: Menstrual Hygiene as a Fundamental Right
“Access to safe, effective, and affordable menstrual hygiene management measures helps a girl child attain the highest standard of sexual and reproductive health. The right to a healthy reproductive life embraces the right to access education and information about sexual health.” https://www.scconline.com/blog/post/2026/01/30/right-to-menstrual-health-part-of-art-21-of-constitution/ The Supreme Court’s recognition of menstrual hygiene as…
