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Street Wise Project Reaches Out to Georgia’s Youth

A new project by World Vision Georgia will equip some 6,000 vulnerable youth with life skills and the tools they need to be safe and economically independent

A new project recently implemented in Georgia by one of the largest Christian relief and development organizations in the world will equip some 6,000 vulnerable youth with life skills and the tools they need to be safe and economically independent in the South Caucasus nation.

The Street Wise project, funded by UNICEF and World Vision Canada, is designed to contribute to the overall goals of the Children in Difficult Circumstances (CEDC) program, which for several years has made continuous efforts to develop youth oriented programs that emphasize the importance of raising children in a family environment, even a poor one, instead of in an institution.

The project highlights the link between street children and children in institutions, as well as between vulnerable families and a lack of community-based services.

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“Georgian, Russian, Armenian, Kurdish and Roma, these young people aged 10 to 20 comprise the forgotten youth of this former Soviet-bloc country,” World Vision stated in a recently released report. “They either live on the streets of its capital, Tbilisi, or are at risk of becoming homeless as they ‘graduate’ from Georgia’s children’s institutions with no welcoming family to turn to and no skills to support themselves.

“Their lack of choices and protection mean that they are vulnerable to traffickers, drug abuse and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS,” the organization added. “They are easy prey for criminal rings.”

Partnering with Street Kids International and Child & Environment, World Vision Georgia hopes to increase children's self-esteem and sense of belonging.

The Street Wise project will train select vulnerable youth to act as youth sector workers and peer educators who will in turn equip youth with practical decision-making skills and the confidence that they can support themselves without turning to the streets.

“We have to create a greater understanding of the plight of children whose lives are being affected by the economic breakdown and those leaving institutions”, says Mary Ellen Chatwin, CEDC Program Manager. She sees the powerful role that youth service workers and especially youth peer educators can have in helping children at risk.

Chatwin believes that training social workers, mobilizing mass media and increasing awareness can have an enormous positive impact on vulnerable children.

According to World Vision, four other projects within the CEDC program headed by Chatwin have already made an impact in changing attitudes in Georgian society. The Street Wise project will further contribute to gains made towards the childcare sector.

Ultimately it is hoped that the project’s close collaboration with existing government and non-government youth sector service providers, as well as the creation of a sound juvenile justice system, will promote and secure the rights of children in Georgia.

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