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Child well-being in rich countries : a comparative overview

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Innocenti report card | Innocenti report cardPublication details: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), 2013. Florence, Italy: Description: electronic document (60 p.); PDF file: 3.42 MBSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 305.23
Online resources: In: Innocenti report card, no. 11, 2013Summary: PART ONE presents a league table of child well-being in 29 of the world’s advanced economies. New Zealand features in just some of the tables due to lack of data. PART TWO looks at what children say about their own well-being (including a league table of children’s life satisfaction). PART THREE examines changes in child well-being in advanced economies over the first decade of the 2000s, looking at each country’s progress in educational achievement, teenage birth rates, childhood obesity levels, the prevalence of bullying, and the use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs. (from the report). See the Clearinghouse news item for more information.
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Innocenti report card, no. 11, 2013

PART ONE presents a league table of child well-being
in 29 of the world’s advanced economies. New Zealand features in just some of the tables due to lack of data.
PART TWO looks at what children say about their
own well-being (including a league table of children’s life satisfaction).
PART THREE examines changes in child well-being in advanced economies over the first decade of the 2000s, looking at each country’s progress in educational achievement, teenage birth rates, childhood obesity levels, the prevalence of bullying, and the use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs. (from the report). See the Clearinghouse news item for more information.