Perception on Child Rights Protection and Media Performance Among Kuje Internally Displaced Persons' Camp, Abuja, Nigeria
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Date
2020
Journal Title
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Volume Title
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Media and Its Role in Protecting the Rights of Children in Africa
Abstract
This essay examines media and child rights protection in Nigeria, using Kuje IDPs Camp in Abuja, FCT as a case
study. It argues that the media has important and indispensable roles to play in enabling the promotion of the United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and Nigeria's Child Rights Act, 2003. The study adopted the qualitative
method through interviews and focus group discussions conducted at the Kuje IDPs Camp. Findings suggest that the
Nigerian government is not committed to implementing the prescription of the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of the Child and the Child Rights Act, thus further jeopardizing the already fractured rights of the of children in
IDPs camps in Nigeria. Similarly, the media is not paying attention to the plight of the displaced children. The
prescriptions advanced in this study as well as the conclusions reached are relevant for policy makers at the national,
regional, and international levels responsible for the rights of the children, especially the Nigerian child.