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Ten Year Action Plan on the Eradication of Child Labour, Forced Labour, Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery In Africa (2020-2030): Agenda 2063-SDG Target 8.7
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Ten Year Action Plan on the Eradication of Child Labour, Forced Labour, Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery In Africa (2020-2030): Agenda 2063-SDG Target 8.7

The Action Plan seeks to contribute to and support the acceleration of progress towards the achievement of the Agenda 2063 – SDG 8.7 target. This involves ending child labour by 2025 and forced labour, human trafficking and modern slavery by 2030. The target population are children, women and men who are victims of or vulnerable to the forms of exploitation addressed by the Agenda 2063 - SDG 8.7 target.

Support to the Development of National Action Plans in Sub-Saharan Africa through Policy Support, Research, Knowledge Building and Advocacy, in particular through Understanding Children’s Work (Final Evaluation Summary)
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Support to the Development of National Action Plans in Sub-Saharan Africa through Policy Support, Research, Knowledge Building and Advocacy, in particular through Understanding Children’s Work (Final Evaluation Summary)

Project: RAF/08/06/ITA Evaluation Consultant: Una Murray

Promotion of a social dialogue programme in Africa (PRODIAF III) (Final Evaluation Summary)
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Promotion of a social dialogue programme in Africa (PRODIAF III) (Final Evaluation Summary)

Project RAF/08/12/BEL - Evaluation consultants: Ian Davies and Mohamadou SY

Prevention and Reintegration of Children Involved in Armed Conflict: An Inter-Regional Programme (Mid Term Evaluation Summary)
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Prevention and Reintegration of Children Involved in Armed Conflict: An Inter-Regional Programme (Mid Term Evaluation Summary)

Project INT/03/52/USA

Wounded Childhood : the use of children in armed conflict in Central Africa
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Wounded Childhood : the use of children in armed conflict in Central Africa

Social protection and crises in the Congo: from humanitarian aid to sustainable development
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ESS Paper Series

Social protection and crises in the Congo: from humanitarian aid to sustainable development

The two Congos have been through a number of crises,which have given rise to a whole host of humanitarian problems. Using the experiences of the two countries as a basis, the report considers to what extent and under what conditions the distribution of humanitarian aid contributes to the development of sustainable social protection. In reality the impact of the crises on the statutory social security system has been extremely adverse, because the latter is at a loss how to cope with thw new challenges and the present state of the manegement of the system does not facilitate the establishement of appropriate solutions. The humanitarian agencies take action in isolated cases, with no overall strategy or vision for overcoming the crisis, and thus there is no interlinking of humanitarian aid and development. What will be the future role of NGOs and social security agencies in the development of sustainable systems of social protection? In view of the widespread poverty that exists, the development of sustainable social protection systems depends not only on interlinking micro credit, micro enterprise and micro healht insurance, but also on new social protection systems, in particular humanitarian social protection, which organizes allocations in kind to healthcare coverage, and temporary mutual health insurance, which covers individuals who do not yet have their own socio-occupational mutual health insurance.