This essay aims to outline and discuss UK social policy in regards to child poverty and child abuse since New Labour’s election in 1997 to present day coalition government. It will analyse and evaluate the effectiveness of political strategies undertaken by both forms of government and consider its observance of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC).
The end of the reign of Coalition government from 1997, left with it a range of issues which the newly elected New Labour government considered serious and of focal relevance in emerging policy. Of the most central they claimed to address, was the issue of child poverty which saw an extraordinary increase in the 1990’s, with more than 1 in 4 households in relative poverty seeing one-quarter to one-third of the children population in poverty by 1997 (JRF, 2010). The UK effectively had the worst rate of child poverty in Europe. New labour recognised how poverty was an inter-linked issue, leading to things such as social-exclusion, a driving force to later detriments for the child in emotional and behavioural outcomes and physical health as well as school achievement. Children were branded the “future” and investing in their well-being would see society reaping the fruits in later society.
New labour took on an ambitious objective, by which they would cut relative child poverty by one-quarter to a third by years 2004-05 and eradicate child poverty completely by the year 2020. The prospect of such an objective would involve major changes in policy that would undoubtedly bring about a shift in social standards set place by former coalition government; the notion of this was not alien to new labour, with Prime Minister Tony Blair pledging progress