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Chapter 4 discusses the integration of child labor into the capitalist relations of production in the Imperial Arsenal. It connects the militarization of labor with industrial and urban modernization in the context of migration crises throughout the second half of the nineteenth century. It analyses how children were forcefully drafted before the Tanzimat and how child labor was central to the transition from tributary to military labor. It then explores how children served to the efforts to maintain military labor in the Arsenal. As the flow of refugees to Istanbul increased in the 1860s, the demanding need for industrial production and the failure of previous schemes of coercion merged with an emerging middle-class consciousness among urban elites who desired to convert the orphaned and refugee children into industrious citizens. The chapter narrates the formation of naval-vocational schools and boys’ companies and battalions within this context and introduces wages and profiles of Muslim and non-Muslim children throughout the different phases of their employment in the Arsenal and the Yarn Factory.
A framing case study discusses child workers in Bolivia. Then the chapter provides an overview of international human rights law. The chapter first discusses the historical origins of the human rights movement and the multilateral and regional human rights systems. Then it outlines major physical integrity rights, including laws that prohibit genocide, ethnic cleansing, torture, and human trafficking. It next turns to major civil and political rights, including the right to free expression, assembly, and association, various religious protections, and criminal justice rights. Finally, it examines major economic, social, and cultural rights, including rules about labor, economic and social assistance, cultural rights, and the rights of marginalized groups, like women, children, and the disabled.
Children and youths account for five of the hymns in the collection: four for children, and one for youths. These, discussed in this chapter, nevertheless comprise an impressive and impressively diverse body of reflections on the death of those who had failed to reach adulthood. They variously narrate the anticipated fate of the departed and the experience of bereavement for families and communities, and discuss a range of pious postures by which they ought to encounter loss. These hymns also provide a site for examining the intersection between the necrosima’s funerary hyumns and Syriac literature more broadly. The madrāshê accordingly reflect themes prominent in the writings of Syriac’s most celebrated authors, including Jacob of Serugh and Ephrem’s genuine writings, and translate these authors’ theological reflections into concise, personalized hymnic epitomes.
This study assessed iron-rich food consumption and its factors among children aged 6–23 months in South and Southeast Asia.
Design:
A cross-sectional study from the Standard Demographic and Health Survey (2015-2022).
Setting:
South and Southeast Asian countries.
Subjects:
Data collected from 95,515 children aged 6 to 23 months, including information from their parents or caregivers.
Results:
The overall proportion of children, aged 6 to 23 months, consuming iron-rich foods in the region was 29.87% (95% CI: 29.58, 30.16). Higher odds of iron-rich food consumption were observed among children aged 12–23 months (AOR = 3.59; 95% CI: 3.45–3.76), had history of exclusive breastfeeding (AOR = 1.17; 95% CI: 1.12–1.23), born to teenage motherhood (AOR = 1.09; 95% CI: 1.02–1.17), born in health institution (AOR = 1.10; 95% CI: 1.02–1.19), and had pregnant mother at the time of the survey (AOR = 1.60; 95% CI: 1.50–1.72). Children of birth order 2–4 (AOR = 1.26; 95% CI: 1.20–1.32) and 5+ (AOR = 1.29; 95% CI: 1.18–1.43), from female-headed households (AOR = 1.06; 95% CI: 1.01–1.12), and those with household mass media exposure (AOR = 1.27; 95% CI: 1.19–1.36) also had significantly higher odds of iron-rich food consumption. Additionally, higher odds ratios (AOR > 1) of iron-rich food consumption were observed in Cambodia, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Myanmar, Maldives, Philippines, Pakistan, and Timor-Leste.
Conclusion:
Across countries, only about 30% of children consumed iron-rich foods, with significant variation. Targeted public health efforts are essential to address maternal, child, and household factors that influence intake.
This study aimed to investigate 1) the longitudinal associations between food patterns and body weight in young adulthood, and 2) how food patterns of young adults relate to food consumption in early, middle and late childhood. The study sample includes 700 participants of the Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development. During childhood, frequency of consumption of various foods was reported on ten occasions between 1.5 and 13 years. At age 22 years, food frequency questions (with quantities) were used to derive four food patterns (labeled healthy, beverage-rich, protein-rich, and high-energy-density) through exploratory factor analysis. Self-reported height and weight were collected at 22 and 23 years. Regression analyses were performed to assess associations between 1) food patterns and weight outcomes a year later (BMI, BMI change, and overweight status); 2) frequency of consumption of eight food groups in childhood and food patterns in adulthood. Dietary habits characterised by the consumption of vegetables, fruit, plant-based sources of protein and whole-grain cereal products were related to a lower risk of obesity a year later. Conversely, dietary habits characterised by a high consumption of energy-dense foods, of animal sources of proteins and, among women, of high quantities of liquids were associated with higher risk of excess weight a year later. Healthier food choices in childhood were associated with healthier food patterns in young adulthood. These findings reinforce the value of preventive dietary interventions in the early years to foster eating environments that favour healthy eating and healthy weights in adulthood.
In this paper, I investigate how parents should talk to their children about injustice. In doing so, I use the non-ideal theory debate in political philosophy to show how the questions traditionally asked there can give substantive guidance to parents. I also contribute to that debate by showing how attention to injustice conversations (a) leads us to ask new questions and develop new modelling tools; (b) can help us to resolve the questions traditionally asked in the debate in a more direct way; and (c) can serve as a model for bringing together substantive and methodological questions in non-ideal theory.
Play has a significant role in children's learning and development. Play in the Early Years examines the central questions about play from the perspectives of children, families and educators, providing a comprehensive introduction to the theory and practice of play for children from birth to eight years. In its fourth edition, Play in the Early Years has been thoroughly updated in line with the revised Early Years Learning Framework and the new version of the Australian Curriculum. It takes both a both a theoretical and a practical approach, and covers recent research into conceptual play and wellbeing. The text looks at social, cultural and institutional approaches to play, and explores a range of strategies for successfully integrating play into early years settings and primary classrooms. Each chapter features case studies and play examples, with questions and reflection activities incorporated throughout to enhance learners' understanding.
As advocates for play, teachers need to have a clear definition of play, a model of play used to guide their practice and a theory of play that underpins their philosophy of teaching and learning. This chapter brings together insights gained about play from all the chapters in this book and invites you to take a position on your own philosophy of play. We then ask you to become an advocate for children’s play.
In this chapter, we seek to examine how play supports children’s overall development. We specifically take the child’s perspective in planning for play development.This chapter has been designed to provide a strong theoretical sense of the concepts of play, learning and development in early education; the capacity to analyse and support play development; a look at planning for play and learning outcomes, drawing on the The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia (V2.0) or Te Whāriki.
At the beginning of this book, we examined your own play memories and those of other people. We concluded that play really matters to children. But what do we really learn about children’s learning and development when we observe and analyse play? We begin this chapter by looking at a play memory of a 16-year-old boy whose parents used play to support their son in dealing with the arrival of his new baby sister.
In this chapter, we will look at how children play in families, and the diversity of roles that parents may take in children’s play. We begin this chapter with details of the play practices of two families living in the same community. We argue that play is learned in families, and in early childhood centres and classrooms, rather than being something that arises naturally within the child. Through reading this chapter on families at play, you will gain insights into how some families play and how play is learned in families, and an understanding that play practices learned at home lay the foundation of children’s play and learning, and that as teachers we should consider how to build upon these early experiences in our early childhood centres and classrooms.
This chapter has been designed to help you learn about: how others plan for play-based learning and intentionality in the The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia (V2.0); what a Conceptual PlayWorld looks like for three groups – infants and toddlers, preschoolers, and children transitioning to school; how to design a Conceptual PlayWorld to support cultural competence; and how to plan a Conceptual PlayWorld for a range of educational settings.
Taking the child’s perspective means looking at the world through the eyes of the infant or the child. This can help us to better understand play practices and better plan for children’s learning and development. But how do we do this in practice? In this chapter we explore these ideas and help you design programs where you gain insight into the importance of documenting infants’ and young children’s perspectives on their play and identify a range of practical ways to find out children’s perspectives on their play.
In this chapter, we look at how play can support children’s learning in schools. We begin by examining how teachers can support children’s learning in play by exploring a range of playful approaches to learning curriculum content. A case study of a play-based approach from the Netherlands is also presented, followed by a range of practical suggestions and resource ideas to support the setting up of a play-based inquiry approach using the Australian Curriculum.
Children’s play reflects the culture and cultural tools of a community. Digital play and digital tools have evolved over time. Described by Susan Edwards as three generations: First generation: 1980 to early 2000s with the focus was on children’s use of digital technologies; Second generation: 2010 with the availability of the iPad and independent digital activity by children; Third generation: the integration of technologies with children’s socio-material activities and everyday lives.
Congenital junctional ectopic tachycardia is a rare arrhythmia that poses significant management challenges. This report presents a case of neonatal-onset congenital junctional ectopic tachycardia treated with cedilanid, amiodarone, and propafenone but persisted in episodes. Sinus rhythm was restored following the initiation of ivabradine therapy. The review of the literature indicates that ivabradine demonstrates efficacy in the treatment of paediatric junctional ectopic tachycardia, particularly in refractory cases, without significant side effects. These findings suggest that ivabradine has broad applications in the treatment of refractory arrhythmias.
Language AI has become a popular tool across the humanities and social sciences, but it has yet to gain traction in socio-cultural anthropology. Fieldnotes, the core data for anthropologists, present a unique opportunity and challenge for applying language AI to understand diverse human behavior and experience. Anthropological fieldnotes are communicative products in cultural contexts through immersive, extensive and idiosyncratic fieldwork. To read fieldnotes, anthropologists typically engage in qualitative, reflexive interpretations, attuned to local meaning systems and intersubjective encounters. This paper demonstrates a novel synergy, combining anthropological expertise and various AI technologies to analyze natural observation texts about children’s peer-interactions, especially their moral dramas, in the historical context of rural Taiwan during the Cold War. These fieldnotes were collected by the late anthropologists Arthur Wolf and Margery Wolf in the world’s first anthropological study focused on Han Chinese children. Engagement with AI in this project began as methodological cross-fertilization, transforming raw fieldnotes into a text-as-data pipeline and discovering how ethnographic close-reading, machine-learning techniques (e.g., unsupervised topic modeling), transformer models (e.g., S-BERT) and generative models (e.g., GPT) can complement and augment each other’s value. Capitalizing on the systematic nature of Arthur Wolf’s fieldnotes, as well as the special protagonists of these fieldnotes – playful children, the most voracious learners – this paper compares how children, the anthropologist and AI make sense of pretend-fight moral dramas. Such a human–AI hybrid experiment embodies layered-interdisciplinarity at methodological, epistemological and, to some extent, ontological levels, anchored at children’s social cognition. Situated at the intersection of anthropology, digital humanities, developmental science and data science, this work sheds light on the similarities and differences in how machines and humans learn and make sense of morality, and by doing so, critically reflect on the nature of socio-moral intelligence.
In “Parental Love and Filial Equality,” Giacomo Floris and Riccardo Spotorno offer an explanation for why parents should treat their children as equals. The authors argue that this moral obligation is grounded in parents’ duty to love their children in an attitudinal, though not necessarily emotional, sense. This duty, they contend, requires them to disregard variations in their children’s status-conferring properties, as long as those properties meet a minimum threshold. This article argues that this account of filial equal treatment has serious shortcomings. In its place, it proposes a more outcome-oriented or consequentialist account.
Children displaced by armed conflict are at high risk of experiencing psychological distress. The ongoing war in Gaza has resulted in widespread trauma among Palestinian youth, yet limited data exist on their mental health following displacement. This study assessed the prevalence and correlates of anxiety and depressive symptoms among war-displaced Palestinian refugee children and adolescents resettled in Qatar.
Aims
To estimate the prevalence of clinically significant anxiety and depressive symptoms and to identify psychosocial and trauma-related factors associated with symptom severity in this population.
Method
A cross-sectional study was conducted among 350 Palestinian children (aged 8–17 years) residing in a residential compound in Qatar. Symptoms of anxiety and depression were measured using the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders-Child Version and the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire-Child Version, respectively. A Resilience and Demographic Questionnaire was devised to assess trauma exposure and psychosocial variables. Multiple linear regression identified factors associated with symptom severity.
Results
Clinically significant anxiety and depressive symptoms were found in 70.9 and 46.0% of participants, respectively. Separation anxiety was the most common subtype. Female gender, witnessing death, physical injury and disrupted caregiving were significantly associated with worse outcomes.
Conclusions
This study highlights the urgent need for trauma-informed, culturally sensitive mental health services for displaced Palestinian children and young people. While clinical interventions are vital, a sustainable resolution to the conflict is essential to mitigate further psychological harm.
To co-develop a systems map of the UK secondary school food system and to understand what factors contribute to food choice within it.
Design:
Participatory methods were used with a range of UK school stakeholders to co-produce a systems map of factors contributing to food choice in the secondary school food system. An online survey with stakeholders (n=26) was used to gather an initial list of factors, and a group model building workshop was conducted with stakeholders (n=13) to establish relationships between these factors. Two school workshops captured views of students (n=17). The map then underwent final refinement by the research team and all stakeholders were provided the opportunity to provide feedback on the final version.
Setting:
United Kingdom
Participants:
UK school stakeholders
Results:
The systems map contained 24 factors with 43 direct causal relationships between them, each factor falling into one of six themes: catering and procurement; school leadership and governance; the priority of food within schools; social experience, behaviours and attitudes; the food space and experience in school; and financial. The map demonstrates how each of the factors interact with each other, including direction of influence. It also reveals feedback loops that shape and sustain food choice patterns in secondary schools.
Conclusions:
The systems map provides a visualisation of the complex secondary school food system and can be used by stakeholders in the design and evaluation of whole-school, multi-component interventions and programmes targeting food choice in secondary schools.