Child and Adolescent Friendly Spaces Providing Protection and Education in Emergencies: A Case Study from the 2015 Nepal Earthquake Response

Author(s)
Lindskog, G. & Claessens, L.
Publication language
English
Pages
17pp
Date published
01 Nov 2016
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Children & youth, Disasters, Earthquakes, Protection, human rights & security
Countries
Nepal
Organisations
Plan International

This case study describes how Child and Adolescent Friendly Spaces set up by Plan International after the 2015 Nepal earthquake provided physical and emotional safety, information and integrated child protection and education services to children, adolescent girls and boys and their caregivers.

After a 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit Nepal on 25th April 2015, Plan International established 88 Child and Adolescent Friendly Spaces that reached 8,543 children and adolescents with a range of recreational, psychosocial and learning activities. The spaces offered a safe and supervised environment for the children to play and learn, as an alternative for their destroyed homes and schools.

When formal education resumed 2 months after the earthquake, some spaces transitioned into Temporary Learning Centres for primary schools while other spaces were used as Adolescent Spaces specifically for adolescent girls and boys to meet and receive support. Self-reported evidence by the users show that the Child and Adolescent Friendly spaces have contributed to improved psychosocial wellbeing of children and adolescents. Girls and boys expressed that they felt safe and happy, that they had a place to meet their friends and talk about their experiences.