Sunday, June 2, 2019
Effects of Orphanhood on Child Development
Effects of Orphanhood on Child Development3. REVIEW OF LITERATUREA solid family purlieu is essential in paving the way for the realization of future dreams and aspirations of clawren.Nelson MandelaThe suffering of small fryren is not in itself what is revolting, but the fact that it is undeserved if we cannot make a gentleman in which children no wanter suffer, at least we can try to reduce the snatch of suffering children Albert Camus L Homme Revolte.Children must be protected not because they ar innocent but because they are powerless Mason CooleyA research literature review is a written summary of the state of quick knowledge on a research problem. The task of reviewing research literature involves identification, selection, critical analysis, and written description of existing information on a topic. 11The various attributes of orphans, orphaning and orphanages are considered in separate sections1. DEFINITIONS OF ORPHANS AND VULNERABLE CHILDRENThe word orphan is derived from the Latin word orbus meaning bereft or to suffer the loss. Today, it applies to a child whos either or twain of the parents are dead.12According to UNICEF the definition of an orphan is any matchless between the ages of 0 and 17 years who has lost at least one parent or both the parents.13Vulnerable children are those who belong to high-risk groups who lack access to basic social amenities or facilities. Vulnerable is alike to the word affected. They include street children, orphans, child prisoners, child laborers, the children of sex workers and, confusingly, children who are orphaned by AIDS or have an HIV-positive parent14. Historically such(prenominal) orphans have been reared by close relatives or in institutions meant for other deprived children like them.Indias commitment to the cause of children is an old as its civilization. The child is believed to be a gift of the Gods, which must be nurtured with care and affection, within the family and the society Unfortunately , due to socio-economic and political factors, the incidence of neglect, abuse and deprivation, particularly in the poerty afflicted sections of the society, has gradually increased .The category of socially handicapped children includes within it those children who are destitute, abandoned, deprived, neglected, victimized, vagrant, and even delinquent children observes.15 Khandekar feels that the term deprived children implies deprivation of many aspects, such as economic, social, familial, emotional and moral.16Bose opines that the category of children in need of care and protection s a wider scope which includes children whose parents are radically poor, children of working women with low income, exploited, runaway children, child beggars, vagrants, delinquents, etc.17Thus we opine a little agreement on the specifics of who can be include into the category of orphan children. Bose vehemently advocates that the juvenile delinquents too be included the kind of orphan children. They have even been called neglected juveniles and described as one who is a destitute, who is left alone, abandoned, forsaken, in utter want, without resources, deprived, in a state of extreme poverty, being without food, shelter etc.The working group appointed by the Department of Social Welfare, Ministry of Human Resources Development, Government of India in 1969 listed the following circumstances to pin down orphans, although there are other terms such as socially handicapped utilise interchangeablya) a child, whose parents are not able to typeface after with proper care and control.b) a child, without any living parents, who is not being looked after by any other near relatives on whom there is a moral or social obligation to look after.c) a child who has no home or settled place of abode, without any seeming(prenominal) means of subsistence.d) a child whose surviving parent is a lunatic.e) a child deserving special protection, from parents who indulge him / her in prost itution, intoxication or anti-social behavior.f) a child whose parents have forced him into beggary, acrobatics or performing tricks for the purpose of earning or any other kind of child labor.g) a child who is uncontrollable.18 boost the Planning Commission of India in the 10th Five year plan has brought all these children under a common category called as children in knockout circumstances and included under this category are street children, abandoned children, orphaned children, child laborers, children who have been physically or sexually abused, children in contravention with law, children with HIV/AIDS, children of terminally ill parents, children of parents serving prison terms, children victims of natural disasters, terrorist attacks, immigration etc, for the purpose of devising need based policies and welfare programmers.192. BURDEN OF ORPHANHOOD IN INDIAThe estimated number of orphans who need care and protection in India would give a better perspective of the magnitu de of the problem on our hands .Though the exact quantum of restricted children is not known, approximations are functional.In India 31 million children have become orphans due to all causes as by 2009.2 Every 2.2 seconds a child loses a parent somewhere in the world. By 2015, It is projected that there will be 400 million orphaned children worldwide.20Moreover, it would be difficult to estimate the number of children who are abandoned, neglected, deprived of enatic or family care due to innumerable other reasons such as family feud, parental desertion, illegitimate pregnancy, natural disasters.3. CAUSES OF ORPHANING3.1 BROKEN HOMES, enate DISHARMONY , agnatic LOSS / DEPRIVATIONBROKEN HOMES, PARENTAL DISHARMONYA large proportion of delinquent and neglected children come from broken homes. Desertion, divorce, illegitimacy, cruelty, drunkenness and drug abuse by the parents are some of the common denominators among the neglected children.21Broken Home is one which is rendered inc omplete by the absence of one or both parents Parental separation or divorce often have an altogether different aspect where in the child is presented with a conflict of loyalties which is sometimes played upon usually by the contesting parents introduces new problem of adjusting to step parents and their attitudes.22There is also a type of home which is thoroughly noxious without being broken. The members of the family go on living together, a life punctuated by quarrels, hatred, brutality, alcoholism, irresponsibility etc and emotional turmoil resulting from domestic discord, parental neglect or rejection may drive the child to retaliatory aggression.23Ganga et al in their scan of 225 inmates of an orphanage in Thanjavur documented that in 43.5% of the children, father had more than one wife, and father had left home in 14.6% while mother had left in 12.9%.24 Manjushree and Srinivasan noticed that of the 73 neglected children, in 8 children frequent quarrels between father and mo ther was observed.25 Thilagaraj in his study of neglected children documented that 37.5% of the parents were unhappily adjusted, parental separation/ desertion was seen in 12.6%. In 10% each, either both the parents had died or one parent had died and there was remarriage or there was no remarriage.26 Singh and co-workers while studying parental image in delinquents observed that in all cases of their study sample, parents had cordial and harmonious relationship.27PARENTAL LOSS / DEPRIVATIONThe presence of a human figure is essential to develop social responsiveness. Because, if the child is constantly exposed to non-living means of stimulation, the feelings of attachments to inanimate objects might generalize to human figure.28The effects of long-term or indissoluble separation form one or both parents are complex. When the separation occurs as early as 3 months after birth, the infants emotional upset seems to be primarily a reaction to the environmental change and strangeness, and he /she usually adapts promptly to a surrogate mother-figure. But once attachment behavior has developed, the emotional hurt of separation may be deeper and more sustained. The child may go through a period of bereavement and have greater difficulty in adjusting to the change. It would appear that the age at which the infant is most vulnerable to long term separation or loss is from 7 months to 5 years.The long term consequences of such a loss appear to depend not just now on the time of its occurrence, but also on factors such as the child in question, his previous relationship with parent and the quality of subsequent parental care.29MATERNAL DEPRIVATION In a pioneering study, Bowlby (1960) summarized the effects of agnate separation on children from 2 to 5 years of age who were hospitalized for prolonged periods.He cited three stages of their separation reaction1) Initial protest characterized by increased crying, screaming and general activity2) Despair which included dej ection, stupor, decreased activity and general secession from the environment, and3) Detachment following the childrens discharge from the hospital and reunion with their mothers in whom the children appeared indifferent and sometimes even hostile towards their parents.30According to Howells separation and deprivation are not synonymous terms. He states that separation of the child and parent, means that the child is physically parted from its parents and has an existence independent of them. On the other hand, deprivation is a term which indicates that a loss is suffered, and when applied to the child, it is used in the following two senses1) Occasionally it is used to denote that the child suffers the loss of its parents, or permanent parent substitute. This usually coincides with physical separation of parent and child (to prevent confusion with the term separation the usage deprivation should be avoided).2) Frequently it is used to denote that the child is deprived of the neces sary care for its emotional growth and so suffers the loss of parentingSeparation, then involves the physical absence of the parent, but not necessarily of parenting. Deprivation involves the loss of parenting but not necessarily of parents. Thereby, he has drawn a distinction between parents as an entity from parenting, that is, the emotional care given by them to the children.31Bowlby comments that in the young childs eyes father plays second fiddle, but is of an indirect value as an economic and emotional support to the mother.30 True enough, this is the impression carried over by the social, psychological and psychiatric literature. The facts however may be different. The father may share parenting, often equally, sometimes pre-dominantly and sometimes subordinately. Few facts are available.Nevertheless, the available literature indicates that the father has an important role to play in maintaining the stability of the family group and in supporting the role of the mother. He h as also a substantial influence on the psychological development of boys and girls.The fathers masculine model (aggressiveness, leadership and objectivity) is necessary for the boy if he is to emancipate himself from the feminine model prevailing at home and develop the qualities of maleness that will make him acceptable to his peers.32The various causes for parental loss described in the various studies, parental deaths due to a number of causes, outnumber all other causes. Fosteer G and colleagues in their study observed that 12.8% of children under 15 years old had a father or mother who had died 5% of orphans had lost both parents.33 Bhagath and Fraser in their study on neglected children found that paternal death was discovered in 40% whereas maternal loss was seen in 15%.34 Presley et at reported parental loss in 49. 2% of 140 neglected children, with 21% maternal loss and 25% had lost both the parents.35 Approximately 23% entering the foster care in the United States of Ameri ca have lost one or both the parents in a survey carried out by Simms M D et al.36
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