Hidden in Plain Sight: The Tragedy of Children's Rights from Ben Franklin to Lionel Tate

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Author: Barbara Bennett Woodhouse

ISBN-10: 0691146217

ISBN-13: 9780691146218

Category: Children's Rights

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"This moving and highly readable book reflects Woodhouse's long career as a distinguished family-law scholar and her deep reflection on the position of children in law and policy. She brings us riveting stories about famous people who, as children, have made significant contributions in areas such as gender equality and civil rights. Woodhouse presents us with the original and compelling argument that children should also have rights, not because they are potential adults, but because of the agency, courage, and vision they can and do exercise as children."—Martha Albertson Fineman, Robert W. Woodruff Professor of Law, Emory University"Woodhouse's superb, nuanced volume demonstrates the importance of treating children with dignity, shows the connection between children's needs and rights, and conveys how a developmentally based human rights framework can shape the balance between dependency and autonomy on the journey from childhood to adulthood."—Robert G. Schwartz, executive director of the Juvenile Law Center"This is a wonderful book that essentially teaches us, through the eyes of a child, what it means to be an American—or at least what it should mean. Through profound and beautifully told stories of the experiences of youth, Professor Woodhouse provides new insight and 'a new conversation' about the misunderstood and improperly politicized concept of children's rights."—Marvin Ventrell, president and CEO of the National Association of Counsel for Children"An intensely personal book, written with passion and conviction. Woodhouse does a highly effective job of conveying the importance of attending to children's voices and agency. This book is likely to attract public attention and spur public debate."—Steven Mintz, author of Huck's Raft: A History of American Childhood"Woodhouse is a wise person of experience whose voice is an important one, because of her good sense, her compassion, and her well-earned reputation in the field. She is also an excellent writer who brings the law alive through her stories, and talks about important legal issues in language that all can understand."—Elizabeth Bartholet, author of Nobody's Children and Family Bonds Elizabeth Falter - Nursing Administration Quarterly This is a substantive book from an academic perspective while maintaining a very readable dialogue. And for absolute certainty, wherever you stand or thought you stood on the issue of children's rights, once you have read this book, you will never look at a children's story the same again.

Illustrations ixForeword Ruth O'Brien xiPreface xvIntroduction: Ain't I a Person? 1Chapter 1 How to Think about Childhood 15Chapter 2 How to Think about Children's Rights 29Part 1 The Privacy Principle: Stories of Bondage and BelongingChapter 3 Boys in Slavery and Servitude: Frederick Douglass 51Chapter 4 Girls at the Intersection of Age, Race, and Gender: Dred Scott's Daughters 75Chapter 5 Growing Up in State Custody: "Tony" and "John G." 93Part 2 The Agency Principle: Stories of Voice and ParticipationChapter 6 The Printer's Apprentice: Ben Franklin and Youth Speech 111Chapter 7 Youth in the Civil Rights Movement: John Lewis and Sheyann Webb 133Part 3 The Equality Principle: Stories of Equal OpportunityChapter 8 Old Maids and Little Women: Louisa Alcott and William Cather 159Chapter 9 Breaking the Prison of Disability: Helen Keller and the Children of "Greenhaven" 180Part 4 The Dignity Principle: Stories of Resistance and ResilienceChapter 10 Hide and Survive: Anne Frank and "Liu" 213Chapter 11 Children at Work: Newsboys, Entrepreneurs, and "Evelyn" 234Part 5 The Protection Principle: Stories of Guilt and InnocenceChapter 12 Telling the Scariest Secrets: Maya Angelou and "Jeannie" 259Chapter 13 Age and the Idea of Innocence: "Amal" and Lionel Tate 279Conclusion: The Future of Rights 304Notes 315Bibliography 337Index 349