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      ISPCAN Regional Congresses

       

      Within the last decade, we have seen large advancements in child protection research, response and prevention. Political will, and national action plans show increasing commitments, but we need to build capacity and a pipeline of specialized workforces in every country.  ISPCAN is investing to ensure countries all develop and invest in strong child protection system strengthening to withstand and respond to all forms of child abuse and neglect. 

      We have a duty to do more – starting with developing multisectoral leadership empowered to fund and develop strong laws, prevention programs over the lifespan of a child, build data systems, include community and voices of children with lived experience. 

      ISPCAN is developing deeper networks of learning in each region to connect researchers, practitioners and policy makers.  Each region will develop unique needs, continuous learning opportunities and develop an ongoing dialogue to advance child protection. 

      Regional Congress Program : Active Learning Forum

      The Huddle

      Master Classes

      On behalf of ISPCAN, it is my great honor to welcome each of you — government leaders, practitioners, researchers, advocates, and partners — to come together with a shared purpose: to strengthen child protection systems and to build a future where every child is safe, valued, and able to thrive. Welcome to the ISPCAN Regional Rise Up Policy Forum and Huddle!

      This regional gathering represents more than a conference. It is a commitment to learn, to collaborate, and advance meaningful reform.

      Across every region and around the world, children represent our greatest opportunity for growth, innovation, and human capital development. Yet too many children continue to face abuse, neglect, exploitation, and violence. Prevention financing remains structurally weak. Coordination across sectors is too often fragmented. Political will must be continuously strengthened. This event was designed precisely to confront these realities with solutions co-created by harnessing the strengths of each nation.

      Our ISPCAN Regional Congress starts with the Huddle. Every sector in child protection huddles up to take a deep dive into a case of child abuse or neglect.  It begins with one powerful premise: from one child’s story, we can illuminate an entire system. By examining a real, de-identified case from the local region, we move beyond theory into lived experience — into the moments where identification faltered, where coordination could have been stronger, and where prevention might have changed the trajectory. But we do not stop at learning. We translate insight into reform. We move from case reflection to fiscal modeling, from multidisciplinary discussion to policy design, from professional development to national infrastructure planning.

      The Rise Up Policy Forum builds on that foundation. With researchers, practitioners and policy makers in the room we will have much interactive, applied learning by taking a public health approach.  Over two days, we will shift from the individual case to national systems: how to build sustainable prevention financing; how to align ministries across health, justice, education, social development, housing, and finance; and how to create the political and fiscal architecture necessary to protect children at scale.

      This is not an abstract dialogue. It is an opportunity to change the health and future of a nation. It is about children, but also about GDP growth and human capital. It is about the measurable cost of inaction and the quantifiable value of prevention. It is about ensuring that child protection is recognized not only as a moral imperative, but as a strategic national investment.

      ISPCAN serves as a bridge between research and practice and as catalyst for sustained reform. Through this regional model, we aim to support governments in developing prevention financing strategies, strengthening data systems, trialing reform bundles, and building an enduring regional network for learning and accountability. Most importantly, we must ensure that the lessons from these three days do not remain in this room. They must become action—translated into policies drafted, budgets reallocated, champions mobilized, and systems strengthened.

      From one child’s story, we can reimagine and build stronger national prevention infrastructures. Through regional collaboration, we will cultivate a learning community that strengthens sister countries. When every nation succeeds, there is no place where perpetrators can hide.

      With the support and vision of Governments, our trusted ISPCAN country partners and international partners, we begin developing a new way forward — one that enables nations to learn from one another and lead lasting reform. We invite you to join us in strengthening nations and building internal capacity. We stand beside you as partners, working to ensure that every country has the tools, research, and effective systems needed to Rise Up to End Child Abuse and Neglect. ISPCAN remains committed to establishing Regional Hubs starting in 2026 so that the knowledge shared, the practical resources developed, and the learning continues — until we get it right.

      Sincerely,

      Pragathi Tummala

      CEO

      ISPCAN

      Goals for Regional Events

      Taking tools and resources back to implement in your country

      Peer to Peer Learning

      Practice, research and policy together to solve problems

      Sharing challenges and local solutions

      Addressing funding of child protection innovatively

      Continued professional development and learning

      ISPCAN led Regional Hubs Established

      A Regional Community of Learning

      Governments, partners and members working on policy changes can be part of an educational forum to learn from one another, connect to ideas, tools and resources across practice and data to transform child protection systems.  This will be an ongoing network that stays in place to connect people and learning between events to make sure the momentum continues forward.

      • Foster a community of learning for countries and regions: bring together policymakers, practitioners, researchers, survivors and youth leaders  to co-create solutions and exchange best practices.

       

      • Advance child protection policies: promote the development and implementation of effective, evidence-based child protection policies grounded in public health principles at local, national, and global levels.

      • Integrate research and practice: encourage alignment of data and research with practical applications to inform shareable data-driven solutions and enhance accountability.

      • Catalyze regional solutions: develop context-specific, scalable strategies that address regional challenges and support sustainable, community-led change.

      • Resource maximization and sector collaboration: optimize use of resources and cross-sector collaboration to assist governments in child protection prevention and response.

      Key Partners for Regional Conferences

      ISPCAN:

      Technical lead + Logistics partner

      Ispcan Country Partner: 

      Technical Lead for the Huddle

      National Governments:

      Technical lead for Rise up Policy Forum + Host country

      Local professional conference organizer: 

      Manages all logistics 

      Without bias, fear of being sued, and without the pressure of handling a live case, we take the time to lift up and do a 360-degree review to learn.  For each sector in the response system to look at the case through the multi-disciplinary collaborative lens –so we can see the opportunities to improve.  Taking a local de-identified case example that inspires one real regional child abuse case into: 

      • National system reform priorities 
      • Fiscal prevention investments 
      • Multisector policy commitments 
      • New regional guidance & standards 

      From one child’s story → national prevention infrastructure reform possibilities for each country 

      If you are interested in hosting a regional event (Spring time every year March-April-May), please:

      • Review the Request for Proposals
      • Determine Local partners
      • Develop Basic Budget
      • Complete EOI Form
      • Regional events are held in different regions than the annual international congress
      Expression of Interest