Prof. Fiona Stanley AC Australian of the Year 2003. Professor Stanley is a vocal advocate for the needs of children and their families. Professor Stanley is the founding Director of the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, established in Perth in 1990. The Institute is multi-disciplinary and researches prevention of major childhood illnesses. It currently has more than 400 staff and students. She is a Professor in the School of Paediatrics and Child Health at the University of Western Australia. Professor Stanley is also the Executive Director and Chairperson of the Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth, a national collaboration of researchers, policy makers and practitioners from a broad range of disciplines who are committed to building a better future for Australia's children and young people. In 2004, Professor Stanley was honoured as an 'Australian Living Treasure' by the National Trust. She is the UNICEF Australian Ambassador for Early Childhood Development. |
Professor Fiona Stanley AC - Children key to the future There is a whole lot more to the current debate about families and children in Australian society that people need to appreciate. It is more than just having a competent workforce for future prosperity and to support an increasing ageing population. Of course, both of these are justification enough for providing the best environments we can for optimal early and continued development, health and wellbeing of children and young people. But what's often missed in the economic debate, is the social impact on the whole community of how well we raise our children. They're not just our future workforce they're our future leaders, our artists, our innovators, our cultural custodians. They'll set the laws and decide what's acceptable and what's valuable - in other words, they'll shape the culture and society in which we live. It's not just good workers that we want - we need good thinkers, good carers, people who share our values - good solid citizens and future parents. The link between how well most children develop and their future health, wellbeing and social participation is clearly demonstrated in all recent long-term studies of child development (such as the so-called 7 Up study in Britain, the Dunedin and Christchurch cohorts in New Zealand, and the Canadian Longitudinal Study of Children and Youth). The messages here are very important for parents and governments alike - early environments that are nurturing and supportive of ordinary families improve children's outcomes at every level of achievement. There is also evidence to show that improving the social and physical environments of the most disadvantaged people, i.e. those who have the poorest education and health, can be improved by intensive home support for their parents. Even Nobel laureate economist James Heckman and others have shown that nothing is more cost effective as an investment for a society than investing in environments that encourage healthy brain development. "If we have a dollar to invest, where do we place it to get the best return? All the evidence points to early intervention as having the highest success rate and therefore the best return for society," Heckman told a recent conference in Sydney. The other aspects of the debate are the costs to society of not acknowledging these important pathways. By not investing effectively into ensuring the maximum number of children and young people reach their potential, we not only reduce the effective workforce, we also have to pay for them when they don't or can't participate. We now have environmental impact statements in planning decisions for proposed developments, and social and environmental bottom lines for companies to judge their success. I suggest that we need to have a family or child "impact assessment" to allow us to assess the impact of our plans and activities to enable (or disable) children and youth to flourish in our society. We need to measure how civilising, just and socially sustainable our actions may be on our children, before we implement them, not afterwards when it is too late to do anything. Let's think quite honestly about how much of our current policy, planning, and work practices would rate if they were subjected to child impact assessment. If the answer is that they would not do very well - that in reality children are rarely considered as a factor in decision making - then shouldn't we think about how those decisions are made? After all, we are all going to have to live with the consequences. |
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