Who we are and our mission 1. 1. Children of Prisoners Europe (COPE) is a pan-European network of organisations and individuals working with and for children with imprisoned parents. The network has a secretariat based in Paris. As of end 2022, members covered 29 Council of Europe member states and 25 EU Member States. Members and affiliate organisations are mostly grassroots NGOs or networks of NGOs offering supports to children with parents in prison and their families. Individual members and affiliates are experts who work or have worked in the field, including academics. 1. 2. COPE's mission is to prevent and respond to violations of the rights of children with imprisoned parents, f... read more Who we are and our mission 1. 1. Children of Prisoners Europe (COPE) is a pan-European network of organisations and individuals working with and for children with imprisoned parents. The network has a secretariat based in Paris. As of end 2022, members covered 29 Council of Europe member states and 25 EU Member States. Members and affiliate organisations are mostly grassroots NGOs or networks of NGOs offering supports to children with parents in prison and their families. Individual members and affiliates are experts who work or have worked in the field, including academics. 1. 2. COPE's mission is to prevent and respond to violations of the rights of children with imprisoned parents, from arrest through to reintegration after the end of a prison sentence, to ensure their individual needs are met, and their best interests are continuously assessed. We take a systems approach to improving the lives of children with imprisoned parents, namely ensure that the systems (welfare, social, justice, education, …) children come into contact with are able to respect their rights and meet their needs, rather than expecting children to adapt to inadequate systems and supports. What we stand for 1. 3. We recognise all children, without discrimination of any kind, as rights holders. COPE members work with children and their families to support fulfilment of their rights and needs. Parental imprisonment can be traumatic and children with imprisoned parents should have access to appropriate and tailored supports. The COPE Network as a whole works to address these issues, including with other sectors, e.g., the school system, the child protection system and the justice system. 1. 4. We take a child rights approach to our work, seeking to develop the capacity of duty-bearers to meeting their obligations to respect, protect and fulfil rights and striving to further develop the capacity of children to claim their rights. 1. 5. We promote broader societal understanding of the life experiences of children with parents in prison and seek to address system gaps to mitigate damage resulting from parental imprisonment to ensure that children with parents in prison can claim their rights and fulfil their potential. 1. 6. We support children (including child human rights defenders) with imprisoned parents and help them to understand, claim and exercise their rights, including to maintain direct and ongoing contact with their parents, in compliance with Article 9.3. 1. 7. Recognising the importance of positive child-parent relationships, we advocate for and help to address system gaps to support and develop the capacity of parents in prison to exercise their responsibilities for the upbringing and development of their children. 1. 8. We are committed to fully involving children with imprisoned parents, their parents - including imprisoned and previously imprisoned parents - and caregivers in our work. We will pay particular attention to involving people facing marginalisation or discrimination of any kind and who are disproportionately represented in the prison population. 1. 9. We are committed to embedding child safeguarding within our network and encouraging others, such as prison services, to do the same, including child human rights defenders within the scope. Applicant organisations for COPE membership are required to adopt and implement a robust child safeguarding policy and sign the COPE code of conduct before their move to full membership can be approved. Individual applicants are required to abide by the COPE child safeguarding policy and to sign the COPE code of conduct. 1. 10. We are committed to fostering compassion, promoting social justice and tackling the causes of system failures affecting children of imprisoned parents. 1. 11. We are committed to increasing our influence and ability to get things done to support and develop the capacity and equitable opportunities of children with imprisoned parents and their families and to build the capacity of duty-bearers to respect, protect and fulfil the rights of children with imprisoned parents. 1. 12. Recognising that children with a parent in prison are not a homogenous group, we are committed to working with and advocating for children with imprisoned parents - and their imprisoned and previously imprisoned parents - in an accurate, principled and respectful way that upholds their rights and dignity. 1. 13. We are committed to ensuring equity, inclusion and ethnic diversity within our leadership, staff, volunteers, partnerships, work with children and their families, and in our advocacy. 1. 14. We are committed to seeking and ensuring gender equality as a fundamental human right, and a necessary foundation for a just world. We are committed to examining issues through a gender lens, including with regard to gender disaggregated statistics. 1. 15. We are committed to challenging, clarifying and dismantling unfounded claims, such as those on intergenerational patterns of criminality and imprisonment that may stigmatise, dehumanise or harm children with imprisoned parents, and their imprisoned and previously imprisoned parents. 1. 16. We are committed to continuously reviewing our messages and all our communication to ensure we put language to good use; to challenging assumptions, labels and stereotypes, and to eradicating from our communications any language that disempowers, dehumanises, degrades, stigmatises, isolates or shames people. 1. 17. We are committed to respecting the privacy rights of children and their parents and caregivers, including, for those in the EU, under the General Data Protection Regulation. 1. 18. We are committed to advocating for, contributing to and using rights-based, scientifically robust and ethical research methods and results to further the realisation of the rights of children with imprisoned parents and to always transparently citing our original sources. We pay particular attention to critically assessing research before we use it to ensure it is accurately cited and is not biased, reductionist or a contributor to the stigmatisation and dehumanisation of children with parents in prison and their families.
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By Children of Prisoners Europe | Organisation
On Sunday, September 8, 2024, 280 Roma children and families impacted by parental imprisonment came together in Vratislavice nad Nisou, Czech Republic, for a vibrant day of sports and leisure... Read the full report ›By COPE | Organisation
The Game with Mum & Dad (GWMD) campaign continues its steady expansion in 2024, marking another year of significant international growth and strengthened... Read the full report ›By COPE | Organisation
Game with Mum & Dad campaign: launch of phase II After the success of the first edition of Game with Mum & Dad, COPE and its network members are ready to launch Phase II. This presents... Read the full report ›