Programs and Campaigns |
CDF's Southern Regional Office opened in Jackson, Mississippi in January 1995 and works in the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi. The Children's Defense Fund grew out of the civil rights movement in these southern states, where slavery, segregation, and poverty have diminished the opportunities for generations of children and call for a special effort to put right. CDF-SRO has worked to educate the public on our children at risk and provide them with the necessary tools to apply pressure to the political establishment to improve the lives of children.
Our current campaigns and programs build upon this long legacy of success by empowering communities and advocates to create the change our children urgently need.
The Cradle to Prison Pipeline is an urgent national crisis that leaves a Black boy born in 2001 with a one in three risk of going to prison and a Latino boy with a one in six risk. The prison pipeline is fueled by pervasive poverty, racial disparities, inadequate health and mental health care, gaps in early childhood development, disparate educational opportunities, chronic abuse and neglect, and overburdened and ineffective juvenile justice systems. Through community summits and educational and advocacy resources, CDF is working with partners across the country to develop action plans tailored to dismantle the pipeline in their community. Learn more about CDF-SRO's efforts to dismantle the Cradle to Prison Pipeline and how you can get involved.
The CDF Freedom Schools program provides summer and after-school enrichment that helps children fall in love with reading, increases their self-esteem, and generates more positive attitudes toward learning. Children are taught using a model curriculum that supports children and families around five essential components: high quality academic enrichment; parent and family involvement; civic engagement and social action; intergenerational leadership development; and nutrition, health and mental health. Learn more about the CDF Freedom Schools program and how you can get involved.
With more than 100,000 uninsured children in Mississippi, CDF-SRO actively participates in the national Health Coverage for All Children Campaign launched by the Children's Defense Fund in 2007 that calls guaranteeing every child and pregnant woman comprehensive health and mental health coverage. CDF-SRO also helps Mississippi families apply for CHIP/Medicaid.
Learn more about CDF-SRO's work on the the Health Coverage for All Children Campaign (PDF).
To help children displaced and traumatized by Katrina and Rita, CDF-SRO offers referral services for displaced families, set up after-school CDF Freedom Schools® programs in Mississippi, Arkansas and New Orleans, made sure displaced children got toys for Christmas, distributed coats and school uniforms and supplies, and helped to rebuild child care centers on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
Learn more about CDF-SRO's Katrina Relief and Referral Efforts (PDF).
CDF-SRO maintains a lobbyist in Jackson and advocates for policies to help disadvantaged children. Our 2008 state legislative priorities include increased funding for public schools and "at risk" students, implementation of early childhood education programs, better access to quality health care, a more progressive tax system that eliminates the burdensome tax on groceries, and reform of the state's dysfunctional child welfare and foster care system.
Learn more about CDF-SRO's Mississippi legislative priorities (PDF).
The Samuel DeWitt Proctor Institute for Child Advocacy Ministry provides five days of spiritual renewal, continuing education, inter-generational movement-building workshops, and networking as Christians from across the denominational spectrum explore how their Christian faith calls them into ministries of child advocacy and guides, shapes, and sustains them in their work with and for children. Learn more about the Proctor Institute and how you can register.
SPARK is a national initiative of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation to help communities unite resources to better prepare children for entering school. CDF-SRO is the grantee for SPARK Mississippi, a $5 million initiative that targets over 1,000 Mississippi children ages 3 to 8 who are vulnerable to poor achievement.
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SRBWI organizes, trains and nurtures women in 77 impoverished rural counties in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia to incubate businesses, build networks of leaders and advocate for public policies that help families and communities. Its Young Women's Leadership Program brings 85 young women and their mentors to a five day leadership training and career development institute each summer on the campus of Tougaloo College, a historically Black college near Jackson, Mississippi. Mayors' Commissions on Human Rights, led by black women mayors in six towns in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, receive training in public policy advocacy to change the debilitating conditions in their communities that trap them and their children in poverty. SRBWI's approach to lifting women out of poverty is Asset and Economic Development building skills, cooperative networks, and small local and regional businesses rather than relying on traditional economic development practices, such as attracting industry, that have left many rural women behind.
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Written as a series of letters to her grandchildren, to our leaders, to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and to all of us, Mrs. Edelman's new book, The Sea is So Wide and My Boat is So Small: Charting a Course for the Next Generation, takes a hard look at what's been done, and what's still left to do to make this world fit for children everywhere.
With the passion and conviction that have made her our leading child advocate, she calls upon us all to stand up for the future of America, to examine what lessons we can learn from our past and out present to realize a just and peaceful world vision for our children and grandchildren, and for future generations.
This multi-faith resource for year-round child advocacy serves as a guide for you and your faith community to engage in child and family advocacy work. The manual includes resources for worship services, education programs, direct service activities, and social justice initiatives for your congregation, organization or community. Learn more and order your copy today.