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  [text only]  Last updated 07/03/2002
    DIA CONACT: Pat Vaughan Tremmel at (847) 491-4892 or at p-tremmel@northwestern.edu

Northwestern Legal Clinic Hosts Rights of Child Conference in Tanzania 

CHICAGO --- Northwestern University School of Law’s Bluhm Legal Clinic will participate in an unprecedented conference on the implementation of the United Nations’ Convention on the Rights of the Child in East Africa to be held March 3-5 in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.

The Bluhm Legal Clinic, in collaboration with the American Bar Association’s Center on Children and the Law and Juvenile Justice Center and the Loyola University School of Law’s Civitas Child Law Program, will host the conference as part of the ABA African Law Initiative Children’s Rights Project.

Four Northwestern law students working with the clinic, legal professionals, educators and children’s rights specialists from Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi and the United States will gather in Tanzania to focus on practical steps for improving the implementation and enforcement of laws affecting the welfare of children.

"Conferences and projects such as this are a vital aspect of our clinical education," said conference organizer Thomas Geraghty, professor and director of the Bluhm Legal Clinic. "Not only are our clinical students gaining excellent experience, but we also have the chance to make a difference and give something back to these communities."

The 10-year-old U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child is the most rapidly and universally accepted human rights document in the history of international law, and in East Africa the legal framework for protecting children’s rights is growing. "Yet, countervailing trends there, including urbanization, political conflict and health-related issues, continue to strain sources of support for the welfare of children," said Geraghty.

Representatives from the four East African countries will give detailed reports on the status of their juvenile justice systems, highlighting areas that need improvement, and also discuss concrete methods for implementing and expanding legal aid for children.

Conference topics include:

  • How Countries are Responding to the Problem of Child Maltreatment
  • How Countries are Responding to the Problem of Children Involved with the Law
  • Interventions on Behalf of Victims of Child Abuse and Sexual Exploitation
  • Interdisciplinary Issues in Juvenile Justice: Adolescent Development, Mental Health and Child Maltreatment
  • Tackling the Resource Question: Developing Financial, Technological and Human Resources

The three-day conference is the second phase of the ABA African Law Initiative Children’s Rights Project. The first phase of the project, which began in December 2000, brought representatives from each country to the United States for a two-week visit to Washington, D.C., and Chicago. During the visit, the ABA, Northwestern University School of Law’s Bluhm Legal Clinic and Loyola University’s Civitas Child Law Program presented an overview of proposed reforms in policies and practices dealing with child protection and the U.S. civil and criminal juvenile justice system.

The Bluhm Legal Clinic is nationally recognized for its effective representation of clients, for its institutional reform activities and for its contributions to scholarship in clinical teaching, legal ethics, the teaching of trial advocacy and children’s law. The clinic’s objective is to educate law students to become leaders in the legal profession’s efforts to improve the administration of justice.

Interaction with the private bar is essential to the clinic’s reality-based instructional, scholarly and institutional reform activities. Clinic faculty members participate actively in bar association activities and committees as well as in state and national committees working to improve justice systems.

For the conference schedule, go to http://www.law.nwu.edu/depts/communicate/newspages/spring01/tanzania_conf.htm

For further information on the Bluhm Legal Clinic, please visit the Clinic’s website at http://www.law.nwu.edu/depts/clinic/index.htm

3/2/01