ISPCAN International Congress & Rise Up Policy Forum: Join 1,000+ child protection professionals in Melbourne, Australia August 24–27, 2026.

National Strategies to Strengthen, Finance, and Scale Up the Social Service Workforce as a Critical Pillar of Child Protection Systems, with Example from Bulgaria, Uganda and Armenia

Presented By:

UNICEF Logo
UNICEF
State Agency for Child Protection at the Council of Ministers, Government of Bulgaria
State Agency for Child Protection, Bulgaria
uganda ministry
Ministry of Gender, Labour, and Social Development, Govt of Uganda
The Six pillars of success from the Rise Up Policy Forum.

Session Summary

A competent social work and wider social service workforce is an integral component of child protection systems, including effective prevention and response to violence, poverty, discrimination, social exclusion and a range of other systemic social and economic challenges for children and families.

The social service workforce is critical to implementation of the UNCRC, Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), European agenda for human rights and children’s rights and achievement of the SDGs globally.

A well-planned, developed and supported[1] social service workforce is a life-changing and powerful force for boys and girls, men and women, families and communities and for delivering a wide range of goals in the fight against poverty, social exclusion and violence.

  • Around half of all children in the ECA region experience or witness violent discipline at home and many also experience violence at school
  • 666,000 children living in institutional care in the ECA region
  • A study of seven countries in the region documented that when women experience violence in the home, children are likely to experience abuse too. Multi-sectoral services for children, men and women can break the cycle of intergenerational transmission of violence.
  • The costs of domestic violence in the ECA region are estimated in the millions, both for services to care for survivors and for loss of productivity and income
  • Child marriage compromises access to education, health and individual agency for girls in excluded minority groups and their lives and those of their children are put at risk, and their contribution to national development is lost.

Investing in a strong, well-planned, developed and supported social service workforce represents a strategic investment in the solution to these challenges and in building human capital and inclusive societies.

 

Rise Up Session Date and Time:
October 9, 2025 2:30 pm
Country or Region Focus:
Europe & Russia
Type of Session:
Rise Up Session
Public Health Pillar Focus:
A National Action, Capacity Building, and Scaled Solutions, A Holistic Approach that Includes All of The Pillars

Speakers

Chair: Guzal Kamalova, Child Protection Specialist, UNICEF Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia​

Speaker:

  • Marga Stoyanova, Policy and Programmes Directorate for Children, Strategic Development and Coordination, State Agency for Child Protection at the Council of Ministers, Government of Bulgaria
  • Lydia Najjemba Wasula, Principal Probation and Welfare Officer for the Ministry of Gender, Labour, and Social Development, Government of Uganda
  • Gevorg, Gharibyan, Head of Children and Social Protection Department, Yerevan Municipality, Armenia

Session Aims

The session will aim to present strong evidence on effective mechanisms for developing and strengthening the SSWF in support of the national child protection systems. It will also aim at examining the national policies context and their impact for the child protection system reforms. Finally, the session will highlight the current challenges that SSWF faces in the countries when participating in the reform process.