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This article is about the human "child", plural "children". For other uses, see Child (disambiguation).
"Childish" redirects here. For the English writer and musician, see Billy Childish.
Children in a doorway in Jerusalem
Children in Namibia
A child is a human being between birth and puberty."child" Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. (January 25, 2008). The term may also define a relationship with a parent or authority figure, or signify group membership in a clan, tribe, or religion; or it can signify being strongly affected by a specific time, place, or circumstance, as in "a child of nature" or "a child of the Sixties."American Heritage Dictionary (December 7, 2007).
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The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child defines a child as "every human being below the age of 18 years unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier".Convention on the Rights of the Child. Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Ratified by 192 of 194 member countries.
In a New York court ruling in 2006 on the eviction of a pregnant woman, the court declared that her child was equally protected under the law although the eviction notice was served before the child was born.Tens of thousands of children evicted without a warrant.. EMAILWIRE.COM, (2006-11-24).
Biologically, a child is anyone in the developmental stage of childhood, between infancy and adulthood.
Girls in China
Social attitudes toward children differ around the world, and these attitudes have changed over time. One study has found that children in the United States are coddled and overprotected.Child-centered America A 1988 study on European attitudes toward the centrality of children found that Italy was more child-centric and Holland less child-centric, with other countries (Austria, Great Britain, Ireland, and West Germany) falling in between.Rachel K. Jones and April Brayfield, Life\'s greatest joy?: European attitudes toward the centrality of children. Social Forces, Vol. 75, No. 4, Jun 1997. 1,239-69 pp. Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
The age at which children are considered responsible for their own actions has also changed over time, and this is reflected in the way they are treated in courts of law. In Roman times, children were regarded as not culpable for crimes, a position later adopted by the Church. In the nineteenth century, children younger than seven years old were believed incapable of crime. Children from the age of seven were considered responsible for their actions. Hence, they could face criminal charges, be sent to adult prisons, and be punished like adults by whipping, branding or hanging.Juvenile courts
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| Preceded by Toddlerhood | Stages of human development Childhood | Succeeded by Preadolescence |
| Human development: biological - psychological | |
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| Stages | Prenatal development • Pre- and perinatal psychology • Infancy • Toddlerhood • Childhood • Preadolescence • Puberty • Adolescence • Adulthood - Early adulthood • Middle adulthood • Late adulthood |
| Development | Child development (stages) • Youth development • Ageing & Senescence |
| Theorists-theories | John Bowlby-attachment • Erik Erikson-psychosocial • Sigmund Freud-psychosexual • Lawrence Kohlberg-moral • Jean Piaget-cognitive • Lev Vygotsky-cultural-historical |
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