International Development Grant
Child Protection Partnership
Project Number: CA-3-A033571001
Status: Closed
Country/Region:
Maximum Contribution: $2,825,671.00
Start Date: February 19, 2008
End Date: March 30, 2012
Duration: 4.1 years
Project Description
The project aims to improve the protection of children from sexual exploitation enabled by information and communication technology including the internet. The Child Protection Partnership (CPP) is enhancing the capacity of law enforcement support services and communities to effectively address this issue and improve collaboration amongst them. This project is implemented by the International Institute for Child Rights and Development (IICRD) along with key partners: the National Child Exploitation Coordination Centre of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police UNICEF Microsoft and Plan Canada. Numerous local partners are involved in each country. CPP builds on Microsoft’s Child Exploitation Tracking System (CETS) an online tool that allows police agencies to share and analyze information related to internet-facilitated child sexual exploitation offences. To improve existing child protection efforts and innovate project activities include: documenting the situation using methodology that integrates the lived experiences and views of vulnerable children; delivering children’s rights and other relevant training; identifying and sharing good practices knowledge and tools; connecting vulnerable children and populations to protection and support services; and fostering improved collaboration between law enforcement and other stakeholders including public sector agencies non-governmental organizations the private sector communities and vulnerable populations. Project activities ended on March 31 2012 but the project remains in operational status as an evaluation is being undertaken.
Progress & Results Achieved
Results achieved as of the end of the project (March 2012) include: (i) helping 40 000 young people (approx. 25 000 in Brazil and 15 000 in Thailand) to be better able to protect themselves when using Information and Communication Technologies (ICT); (ii) bringing together law enforcement and other stakeholders from Brazil and Thailand to learn from each other and collaborate in fighting child sexual exploitation that is enabled by ICTs. In Thailand for example an ICT child safe curriculum was developed for use in formal and non-formal education settings. The curriculum was piloted in three communities and reached close to 3 500 teachers and students. The Thai Ministry of Education is now interested in disseminating the curriculum to more than 2 000 schools and 12 million students across Thailand. In Brazil operators of local internet cafés (called “LAN houses”) where children access the Internet were given support to make their LAN houses safer for children thereby increasing their business. A child-friendly online game was developed to help educators and young people learn about the risks of ICT- enabled child sexual exploitation. The Brazilian Minister of Justice invited a project working group to submit a proposal to establish a Child Exploitation Coordination Centre in Brazil. The Centre would be modeled in part on the Canadian model of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police’s National Child Exploitation Coordination Centre. ICT-enabled child sexual exploitation was also integrated in the curriculum of a training course for 4 000 officers of the Sao Paulo State Military Police.
Key Information
Executing Agency:
IICRD - International Institute forChild Rights and DevelopmentCentre for Global Studies
Reporting Organization:
Global Affairs Canada
Program:
YFMInternaAssistPartnershp&Programing Br
Last Modified:
September 19, 2025
Development Classifications
DAC Sector:
Aid Type: Project-type interventions
Collaboration: Bilateral
Finance Type: Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation
Selection Mechanism:
Pre-APP