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With a Vision and a Gift, the Consortium for the Advancement of Childrenā€™s Rights Becomes a Reality

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Ricketson Law Building

On the 30th anniversary of the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, the United Nations (UN) created the (CRC), an international human rights treaty that outlines the civil, political, economic, social, health and cultural rights of children. To date, it is the largest human rights treaty in history and has been ratified by 196 countries.

The United States is the single member of the UN who has not ratified the CRC.

For three distinguished childrenā€™s law advocates, the situation is dire.

ā€œChildren,ā€ they wrote, ā€œare the invisible center of almost any debate.ā€

Gun violence is the leading cause of death among youth, often occurring in schools. Children face the most devastating consequences from the climate crisis and are being warehoused at our borders. Public schools are as racially segregated, and according to , more racially segregated than they were in the late 1960s. The demographic disparities of those funneled into school-to-prison pipelines, via racially discriminatory disciplinary policies, mirror racialized incarceration rates; and, in the midst of the COVID pandemic, children are increasingly the unintended targets of legislation, or worse, used as political bargaining chips.

With an unrestricted gift of more than $2 million from an anonymous donor, and the support of their respective institutions, Professors , æģ»īapp Sturm College of Law; , Northwestern Pritzker School of Law; and , Georgia State University School of Law, have formed the Consortium for the Advancement of Childrenā€™s Constitutional Rights. Guided by a Nelson Mandela quote, ā€œThere can be no keener revelation of a society's soul than the way in which it treats its children,ā€ their goal is to ā€œreimagine the constitutional law canon through the lived experiences and perspectives of children, especially children in diverse and underserved communities.ā€

ā€œOver thirty years ago, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child declared that children should be raised ā€˜in the spirit of peace, dignity, tolerance, freedom, equality, and solidarity,ā€™ā€ noted Sturm College of Law Dean Bruce Smith. ā€œBut our legal system in the United States has too often failed to deliver on these noble aspirations. Professor Smith and her academic partners are uniquely positioned to advance the cause of childrenā€™s rights in this nation and across the world, and we applaud their important and timely work.ā€

ā€œI met Catherine [Smith] nearly twenty years ago,ā€ Washington Hicks, also a member of the Georgia State University College of Lawā€™s Center for Access to Justice, explained. ā€œWe would see each other at different conferences, and our work was always aligned and complementary. My research and scholarship were focused on a substantive due process-based childrenā€™s rights framework, and Catherineā€™s was focused on an equal protection-based childrenā€™s rights framework. Both frameworks arise out of 14thĢżAmendment protections and liberties.ā€

Smith and Washington Hicks collaborated on multiple noteworthy Supreme Court amicus briefs advancing childrenā€™s constitutional rights in the context of the Defense of Marriage Act inĢżĢżand inĢż, the landmark decision recognizing same-sex couplesā€™Ģżfundamental right to marry.Ģż

Walker Sterling, a former Denver Law professor, is the associate dean for clinical education at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, currently visiting at Yale Law School, brings a different expertise to the Consortium and childrenā€™s rights, having spent her career representing young people in juvenile legal proceedings and researching and writing about juvenile defense and delinquency. A nationally recognized teacher and scholar, Walker Sterling has served as a public defender representing children accused of crime, as a guardian ad litem representing youths in dependency proceedings, and as Special Counsel at national juvenile justice policy organization.

In 2021, the three of them decided to work together to create space for childrenā€™s rights within the United States Constitution.

The gift gives the scholars ā€œfreedom and space,ā€ Washington Hicks said, ā€œto continue our innovative work advancing childrenā€™s constitutional rights across a continuum of legal contexts.ā€

The initial focus of the Consortiumā€™s three-year project will focus on four areas, or pillars: climate change, education, families, and juvenile justice.Ģż

Already, they would like to add a fifth focus area, based on an urgent need in the United States.

ā€œGun control,ā€ Walker Sterling said, with Smith and Washington Hicks in absolute agreement.

The beauty of the gift is that, with its investment in developing something to stand the test of time, it allows for flexibility.

So, what comes next?

In addition to future research and scholarship, expect a childrenā€™s constitutional rights course and textbook, a key priority in shifting lawyersā€™ training to include childrenā€™s rights as a priority. Supporting scholars writing and practicing in the field, as well as establishing interdisciplinary collaborations, are other crucial objectives.ĢżAnd, in the 2023-24 academic year, a convening of leading childrenā€™s rights scholars at Georgia State University College of Law.ĢżThey welcome collaborators, funders, and other childrenā€™s rights stakeholders to join in their cause.Ģż

ā€œWe are developing the framework for change,ā€ Smith said. ā€œThis is not a 10- or 20-year project; it is one that requires collaboration with those committed to changing how we see children and understand, approach, and enforce their rights. As we emphasized in our proposal, ā€˜Fifty years from now, we hope that society will look back on our current anachronistic framework for childrenā€™s rights and wonder how we ever justified its existence.ā€™ā€