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First Years First Priority Newsletter


01/03/22

The first years of life must be the first priority in times of peace, and even more in times of war.
 
Children represent a country’s most precious treasure and the treasure of our world. Right now, millions of Ukrainian children are displaced, in fear and danger, going through traumatic experiences alongside their families. Shelter, food, warm clothing, clean water, electricity are necessities to ensure health, safety, and survival. These basic necessities are at risk. Ukrainian children must be protected; they need all of us to show them that they matter.
 
We never imagined that children in Europe would witness insecurity and anxiety caused by a war on the European territory. We must do everything in our power to provide Ukrainian children and their families with all the support they need in Ukraine and in all European countries where many will seek refuge.
 
Let’s not forget that children who have faced hardships even before the conflict – children living in severe poverty, Roma children, children with disabilities, children in institutions – are at an even greater risk. These children and their families already struggle with great injustices, which stand to be exacerbated in such dire times. Every young child deserves to be seen, listened to, protected, and cared for. 
 
We call on all governmental and private organizations in Europe to prioritize and coordinate funds, human resources, and interventions to ensure that young Ukrainian children and their families are safe and protected, that their basic needs are met. Additional support services will be critical in the neighbouring countries that welcome displaced children and families.

Support will be necessary to provide children with spaces where they can play, learn, and socialize with peers, and feel as little fear and anxiety as possible, and for their parents and caregivers to cope with the overwhelming feeling of insecurity about their future.
 
Young children must come first.
 
Eurochild and ISSA,
First Years, First Priority Campaign Co-leaders
 
We stand by our members and all organizations that strive to support families with young children in Ukraine, and those in neighbouring countries supporting refugee families. We need to do all that we can to help them in their efforts! You can help too – contact us if you want to support!
Position paper on the European Care Strategy
The First Years, First Priority campaign welcomes the announcement by the European Commission to develop a European Care Strategy. We support calls from civil society actors for a ‘life-course’
and continuum of care approach, which considers care needs from infancy and throughout people’s lives. Read our recommendations.

 
Conference on the Future of Europe
The Conference on the Future of Europe was launched in 2021 for citizens to discuss the EU's challenges and priorities. The First Years, First Priority campaign has shared its discussion and key findings on the importance of early childhood for children's wellbeing and development and for tackling poverty and social exclusion in Europe.
Monitoring children’s rights around the world
Blog by the GlobalChild Project, the world’s first comprehensive child rights monitoring platform for children 0-18 years old.
European Innovative Teaching Award
The European Innovative Teaching Award will award 19 education projects in the “Early childhood education and care” category, thus highlighting the most innovative learning and teaching practices put in place by teachers with children.
Country Health Profiles 2021
The OECD State of Health in the EU’s Country Health Profiles provide a concise and policy-relevant overview of health and health systems in the EU/European Economic area, emphasizing the particular characteristics and challenges in each country.
The effect of ECEC services on the integration of refugee families
This paper focuses on the integration of families seeking asylum in Germany between 2013 and 2016. It estimates the effect of ECEC attendance by refugee children on their parents’ integration.
Strengthening Early Childhood Education and Care in Ireland
This OECD report provides tailored policy recommendations to improve provision in line with national goals, outlines the sector’s main strengths and challenges, focusing on workforce development and quality assurance through monitoring and inspections.
Education in the recovery and resilience plans – Thematic analysis: Education (Dec 2021)
According to the European Commission report, investments in early childhood education and care are expected to increase participation rates, in particular among disadvantaged groups, hence reducing inequalities.
Impact of Covid-19 social isolation measures on early development
An international consortium with researchers from 13 countries has investigated the impact of Covid-19 related social isolation measures on 2,200 young infants and toddlers between 8 and 36 months of age.
Does quality matter in determining child care prices?
This paper investigates the role of quality in determining private child care prices using a unique provider-level data set collected in five provinces of Turkey.

How to Ensure that the Benefits of Early Childhood Education and Care are Realised 

According to this policy brief by the European Expert Network on Economics of Education (EENEE), besides encouraging further research, policy-makers should continue to advance the accessibility and quality of ECEC. In order to do so, they need to target several fronts at the same time.
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