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Children at War
by
P. W. Singer


Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Over six million child combatants were killed or injured in the past decade. In
this groundbreaking and comprehensive study, Singer, a fellow at the Brookings
Institution and former adviser to the U.S. military, explores the rise and
expansion of child soldiery. Children, Singer finds, enter armies and militias
in numerous ways: as voluntary soldiers, indoctrinated to kill; as involuntary
soldiers, forced into the militia or military by cruel adults; as
child-terrorists; as members of all-child armies (such as the Hitler Youth); and
as sexual slaves for superior officers. Singer (Corporate Warriors) explores
different means of training and indoctrination, often through interviews with
child-soldiers, as well as with adults who have fought against them and others
who have tried to rehabilitate children forced into warfare. In the concluding
section, Singer notes that instruments of international law such as the U.N.
Convention on the Rights of the Child prohibit the use of child-combatants, but
that these treaties have been ineffective in actually reducing the prevalence of
child-soldiers. One hope is that the new International Criminal Court will be
empowered to punish those who recruit children and send them into battle.
However they seek to accomplish their goal, activists will be aided by the
diligent research and reasoned analysis provided by Singer's study, as will
those who fund their work�i.e., anyone who gives to international aid
organizations.
Copyright � Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved.
From Booklist
*Starred Review* "The rebels told me to join them, but I said no. Then they
killed my smaller brother. I changed my mind," explains "L," age seven, in
Singer's chilling study of the now-conventional use of children in modern
warfare. Some 43 percent (157 of 366) of all armed organizations around the
world--from Sierra Leone to Colombia, Sri Lanka to the Congo, Liberia to
Sudan--use child soldiers, 90 percent of whom see battle. In the last decade,
more than 2 million children have been killed in combat, a rate of some 500 per
day. Singer, National Security Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies Program at
the Brookings Institution, came upon the phenomenon when the soldiers he
interviewed for his first book, Corporate Warriors (2003), told him of seeing so
many child adversaries. Here he details many of the underlying causes of the
practice, and he explains how the children are recruited, often simply by
whether they are strong enough to carry a weapon. He explores the full
implications for using children in combat and discusses how the problem can be
addressed, such as treating it as a war crime and punishing those leaders
responsible. He neglects to say, though, that the abuse is first and best
addressed by exposing it to world scrutiny, which this thoughtful and heartfelt
book will do. Alan Moores
Copyright � American Library Association. All rights reserved
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Young Soldiers: Why They Choose to Fight
by Rachel Brett, Irma
Specht


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Child Soldiers: Youth Who Participate in Armed
Conflict
by Laura A Barnitz

Editorial Reviews
Rachel Brett, author, Children: The Invisible Soldiers
�Child Soldiers is indeed an attractive publication with plenty of
information in an easy-to-read form. Congratulations.�
Book Description
�Child Soldiers� provides an overview of the conditions and treatment of
the estimated 300,000 children worldwide who fight in armed conflicts. It
describes the impact that soldiering has on children and steps being taken to
end this abuse. Based on the latest research, �Child Soldiers� provides a
solid introduction to the issue and includes a list of sources for more
information.
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Child Soldier: Fighting For My Life
by China Keitetsi

About the Author
China, a child soldier in the 1970's, has spoken at the United Nations on
the rights of the child, and has made it her life�s work to fight for the
respect that all children are due.
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Armies Of The Young: Child Soldiers
In War And Terrorism (The Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)
by David M. Rosen

Editorial Reviews
Phyllis Chesler, author of The New Anti-Semitism
No thinking person, no media commentator, no political leader can afford to be
without this book.
Library Journal
This provocative analysis...reveals that the traditional humanitarian view
of child soldiers as victims oversimplifies a complex problem.
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African Kids: Between Warlords, Child Soldiers, And Living On The Street
by Melha Rout Beil

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Child Soldiers: A Study on Behalf of the Henry Dunant Institute, Geneva
by Guy S. Goodwin-Gill, Ilene Cohn, Institut Henry-Dunant
(Corporate Author)

Book Description
1994 is the International Year of the Family, and debates about the rights
of the child are once again at the top of the national and international legal
and political agenda. Yet in places of armed conflict all over the world tens of
thousands of children are recruited to fight in bloody conflicts, and their
rights are systematically ignored and abused.
In this path-breaking study, Goodwin-Gill and Cohn assess the status of the
Child Soldier in international law and highlight the ways in which international
humanitarian law fails to provide effective protection, particularly in the
internal conflicts which are the most common battlefields today. Based on
empirical data gathered from places of conflict all over the world, the authors
examine the consequences for child soldiers, their families and community of
their participation in armed conflict. They conclude their study with practical
suggestions for preventing recruitment, and call for a more coherent policy of
treatment for those children who have participated in acts of violence.
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