Approach,
Strategy and Replicability.
MVF follows an ‘area-based approach’
as against a target based approach. It seeks to address
the rights of the entire universe of children- both
in school and out of school- in the 5-14 years age
group in its area of operation. This approach deems
all children out of school as child labour and understands
that being out of school is intrinsically hazardous
to their growth and well-being. MV Foundation also
ensures that every child attending school does so
without any disruption until she reaches class 10
since there is no guarantee that the child does not
get pushed out of school to join the labour force
again.
MV Foundation’s approach has the twin responsibility
of organizing community for public action and pressure
on the system to deliver services. Simultaneously,
it seeks to prepare the concerned public institutions
to take care of children and their education in formal
schools.
MV Foundation also understands the need to engage
with policy makers to bring about systemic changes
to address the needs of the first generation learners,
older children rejoining schools after a long absence,
released child labourers and girls who have sought
education by stepping out of marriages and other forms
of violation of their rights.
MVF does not set up parallel institutions to the
schools, social welfare hostels, gram panchayats and
other state institutions. The MVF program has blended
with the existing government programs enriching rather
than supplanting them.
MVF strongly believes that to be replicable it must
work through existing institutions and build community
pressure/support to strengthen these institutions
and their capacities to ensure that they commit themselves
to protection of child rights and education
Much of the replicability of MVF’s programme
is due to the clear set of principles, ‘the
non-negotiables’, that it has evolved and a
simple message that ‘no child must work and
every child attends school’.
MVF has successfully implemented the programme in
tribal and forest regions, coastal belts, deserts,
dry land farms, urban belts, among fisherfolk, nomads,
tribals, landless poor agricultural labourers, migrant
labour, quarry workers and with urban workers in the
informal sector
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