Support to parents and caregivers is a key regional agenda, yet too often the groups most in need of tailored, inclusive interventions remain overlooked. Kinship carers - who provide the majority of family-based care in Africa - require explicit recognition in law and policy, and targeted support to address their unique challenges. Without this, protection systems risk perpetuating invisibility and inequity.
This session will highlight the current challenges for Kinship care support and opportunities for how inclusive legislative frameworks, integrated programme approaches, and robust monitoring mechanisms can ensure kinship care is visible, valued, and resourced. By strengthening recognition of these caregivers, we can build protection systems that reduce violence against children, prevent unnecessary family separation, and advance sustainable, child-centred care reform across the African region.
Moderator and Speaker 1: Blessing Mutama (Member of Family for Every
Child - Global and regional perspective), and FOST (Zimbabwe) -
Presenting the policy perspective from the region (focus on 6 African
Countries)
Speaker 2: Levis Kagiri (Representing PKL Kenya)
Speaker 3: Government Representative Department of Social
Development Zimbabwe (TBC)