Mood matters: A voice for the stressed-out children 
Sir Alfred Aynsley-Green despairs at the 'awfulness' of so many English pupils' 
lives - and wants to turn anxious youngsters into happy and successful adults. 
Can he make a difference? Hilary Wilce meets him 
Published: 01 November 2007 
 Mr Happy: Can this man cure children's angst? 
The man who is the voice of England's children works out of an office so bright 
and cheerful that its smacking new orange, green and purple decor could be a 
Saturday morning TV studio. But the news unrolling on the television screen in 
the reception area is bleak. Two tiny boys, aged six and seven, have been 
killed while pushing their scooters along a motorway in the dark. Then there is 
the breaking news that the Government has just decided not to abolish spanking.

It is clearly apparent that Sir Alfred Aynsley-Green, the Children's 
Commissioner for England, is a man in an impossible job. His task is make this 
country a place where children feel respected, listened to, loved, safe, happy 
and able to reach their full potential.

But our children are so far from this that the gulf seems unbridgeable. In 
February UNICEF declared British children the least fortunate in the developed 
world. It said that they were unhappy, unhealthy, engaging in risky behaviour, 
had poor relationships with friends and peers, low expectations and no feeling 
of safety. The Government argued that the report had used old data and that 
things were better now. But then came last month's interim report from the 
Primary Review, a major Cambridge-based inquiry into primary schools, declaring 
that today's children feel anxious, stressed, unsafe and pessimistic; 
meanwhile, new figures from the Department of Health show that a quarter of 11- 
to 15-year-olds are now classed as obese.

The commercialism, individualism and social fragmentation of 21st-century 
England are clearly making the world a perilous and miserable place for 
children, with three-quarters of them saying that they feel neither respected 
nor heard. Not surprising, then, to learn that, two years into the job, beyond 
"the exhilaration and inspiration of meeting so many fantastic children", Sir 
Al, as he likes to be known, is feeling anger and despair.

"Despair at seeing the awfulness of the lives of so many children, in this, one 
of the richest countries in the world," he says, "and deep anger that we have 
so many children under our noses who are very unhappy, and who are not 
succeeding. Yet, most people are quite oblivious to what's under their noses in 
terms of the impact of society on children."

The role of Children's Commissioner for England was set up two years ago, under 
the 2004 Children's Act, in response to growing calls for the improved care and 
protection of children. Sir Al had experience as an eminent paediatrician and 
as a senior civil servant: he was Nuffield professor of child health at Great 
Ormond Street Hospital for Children and the Institute of Child Health, 
University College, London, as well as the national clinical director for 
children at the Department of Health. To the new post, he brought decades of 
dealing with sick children and their parents, as well as his Whitehall 
experience of lobbying, advocacy and alliance-building.

But it is clear that travelling around England, talking to children on inner 
city estates, in traveller camps, in special schools and in isolated rural 
villages has given him much pause for thought. Although his tone is dry and 
doctorly, his message is savage.

"We are a remarkably child-unfriendly country - so much so that I have come to 
believe there is something endemic, something built into the English psyche, 
that makes us this way. Look at today's issue of physical punishment, which is, 
I think, a barometer of how children are valued. Twenty-odd European countries 
and New Zealand have introduced legislation about how children should be 
respected in this area, but not us. We have a low age of criminal 
responsibility; we have ever-more children subject to ASBOs and punishment and 
control instruments; and we have one of the highest rates of incarceration of 
children in the civilised world. Yet, the popular sentiment is not to see 
children who are vulnerable and who need help, but to see them as a burden to 
society, needing to be locked away."

There is also, he says, a total failure to realise that children have rights. 
"As soon as you mention rights, and particularly children's rights, you get a 
barrage of criticism."

In fact, his own post has been widely criticised by children's charities and 
lobby groups as being "rights-light" and lacking full independence from 
government. It has no power of enforcement, and is limited to listening, 
recommending and seeking to influence. Sir Al, though, stresses that his powers 
- such as the right to enter any premises where a child is looked after, as 
long as it is not a private home - have helped bring about important changes in 
the areas of youth justice and young asylum-seekers.

It is clear that the Government wanted to avoid creating a post that could 
really shake things up for children. Sir Al's appointment lagged behind similar 
appointments in Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland, and came with fewer 
powers. He has only a budget of £3m and a staff of 30. Much of his time so far 
has been spent setting up the organisation and "re-branding" it, with the help 
of children, into the snappily labelled 11 Million, after the number of 
children in England. Marketing this new brand - including using extensive 
consultations with children and young people to help create a child-friendly 
website and resources - continues to be a major focus of his work. It reflects 
his aim of wanting to create, by the time his five-year term comes to an end, a 
"respected, authoritative, competent and careful organisation that can speak 
for the needs of all children".

But when it comes to targeted interventions, he knows that his limited 
resources mean that he cannot spread himself all over the place; rather, he 
must do one or two things well. And there have been successes: he has helped to 
stop children being placed in adult mental health wards; to shelve the use of 
housing benefit sanctions to punish antisocial families; to improve the access 
of young asylum-seekers to benefits; and to obtain additional money for the 
education of autistic children.

But his central role, he says, is to consult children as widely and thoroughly 
as he can, so that he can accurately convey their concerns to those in power. 
"My whole legitimacy is based on what children and young people tell me," he 
says. He spends time on the road travelling the country, and goes out of his 
way to reach the most unreachable children, such as travellers' children.

The Commission's annual programme is designed to reflect what children say are 
their main concerns. This year, half the budget is being spent on issues of 
health and happiness. Next year, the focus will be bullying, violence and 
abuse. "Many children are profoundly concerned about domestic violence in their 
homes, and about physical punishment. And they are very concerned about school 
life, and about bullying, and they want it stopped," he says. This month, he is 
hoping to raise the profile of children with the 11 Million Takeover Day, when 
children will have the chance to take over from adults in hundreds of 
organisations.

And although his job is mired in frustration, he is keen to point out just how 
far the Government has come in its development of child-centred policies, such 
as Sure Start and Every Child Matters. "I would argue that more has been done 
in the last seven years than in the whole 30 years before," he says.

The forces ranged against today's children are deeply woven into the fabric of 
society, he says. "There is the loss of time for children to be children, the 
incessant commercialisation of childhood by the advertising industry, and the 
relentless sexualisation of children at very young ages." Then there is the 
media, "which consistently demonises children, even though 10 times more of 
them are giving back to society by volunteering than are causing trouble."

Then there is ourselves. If Sir Al could have just one wish, he says, it would 
not be for better legislation, or for improved services. It would be that 
parenting be recognised for the crucial thing that it is, and that it be given 
the time and resources that it needs. And he would also like to ask us all one 
simple question: do we value children enough?

 The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"
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