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MEDIA CONTACT: Pat Vaughan Tremmel at (847) 491-4892 or at
p-tremmel@northwestern.edu
February 25, 2002
Knudsen to Talk About Afghan Children
CHICAGO --- Christine Knudsen, a children and war specialist
with Save the Children, will talk about the children of Afghanistan
at 6 p.m. Monday, March 11, in Lincoln Hall at Northwestern
University School of Law, 357 E. Chicago Ave.
The speech, "The Way Forward for Afghanistans Children:
Insights from Save the Childrens Experience," will
kick off a speakers series commemorating the 10th anniversary
of the founding of the Children and Family Justice Center
of the Northwestern University School of Laws Bluhm
Legal Clinic. The speech is free and open to the public.
Knudsen will share insights and expertise concerning the overwhelming
problems that Afghan children face, including two decades
of war, three continuous years of drought in northwest Afghanistan,
hunger, mass migrations and alarming child mortality rates
due to disease and lack of proper medicine. Much of the infrastructure
of the country has been devastated, and access to education
and health care for women and children remains limited.
"Children are our worlds greatest resource, and
our goal, since our founding in 1992, is to improve and ensure
the highest degree of justice and legal advocacy for them,"
said Bernardine Dohrn, director of the Children and Family
Justice Center. "While our work focuses primarily on
the needs of children in Illinois and the U.S., we have become
increasingly involved in international human rights issues."
Among the statistics Knudsen will cite about Afghanistan and
its children:
One of every four children dies before his or her fifth
birthday.
There are an estimated 10 million land mines the equivalent
of roughly one for every child.
One in five children is born in a refugee camp.
Only 3 percent of girls and 39 percent of boys are enrolled
in school.
Fifty thousand children are working on the streets of the
capital, Kabul.
In her work with Save the Children, Knudsen has traveled to
Pakistan twice since Sept. 11 and will be going to Afghanistan
in May.
A 70-year-old international child relief program, Save the
Children has been responding to the needs of Afghan children
refugees since 1985. It delivers emergency supplies of food,
shelter, fuel and medicine and ensures childrens safety
and well-being through land mine awareness and health education.
Save the Children also implements programs that address long-term
development needs such as literacy, nutrition, health and
economic security.
Knudsen, a children and war specialist in the Children in
Crisis Unit, joined Save the Children in 1999. Prior to that,
her field postings included work with UNHCR (the UN Refugee
Agency), in Chechnya and with Catholic Relief Services in
Burundi. Between field assignments, she also spent one year
as a researcher for the War-Torn Societies Project of the
United Nations Research Institute for Social Development,
exploring the interaction of national and international actors
in post-conflict reconstruction.
The Children and Family Justice Center, part of the Bluhm
Legal Clinic at Northwestern University School of Law, is
a multifaceted childrens law center that provides legal
representation for children with a wide variety of needs.
Northwestern law students, working under the direct supervision
of clinical professors and attorneys, work on cases as part
of their coursework. The Children and Family Justice Center
has led local and national efforts to increase public knowledge
about justice matters for youth and has been instrumental
in the reform of Cook County Juvenile Court, the oldest and
largest juvenile court in the country.
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