Child development and formation of human capital: overlap of economic aspects to the detriment of rights

Authors

  • Maísa de Lima Claro Secretaria Municipal de Saúde de São João do Piauí
  • Artemizia Francisca de Sousa Universidade Federal do Piauí.
  • Reseanne de Sousa Nobre Instituto Federal de Alagoas
  • Luisa Helena de Oliveira Lima Universidade Federal do Piauí

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26694/reufpi.v10i1.2233

Keywords:

Desenvolvimento infantil, Saúde da criança, Economia

Abstract

The study aims to reflect on child development over time, where the motivations of the State to ensure minimum rights for children are noticeable, since the medieval era they were motivated by the guarantee of labor in the future. Since ensuring a quality of life from an early stage increases the chances of this child reaching a healthier adult stage, as science has shown. However, over the years, there were several barriers to be broken in order to consolidate children's rights and the legal guarantee of care for them. At the Brazilian level, the legal verification that ensured childhood rights only came to light in 1988, with the promulgation of the Citizen Constitution. Since then, new challenges have arisen, which require a constant improvement of the laws, since there is a conflict of interests between health agencies and the industry, as the former aims at the well-being of children and the latter at profit. In this way, child development must be ensured as a right, and the idea that it will favor the economy should not be perpetuated, the latter tends to happen as a consequence.

Published

2022-05-23

How to Cite

1.
de Lima Claro M, Francisca de Sousa A, de Sousa Nobre R, Helena de Oliveira Lima L. Child development and formation of human capital: overlap of economic aspects to the detriment of rights. Rev Enferm UFPI [Internet]. 2022 May 23 [cited 2024 Nov. 24];10(1). Available from: https://periodicos.ufpi.br/index.php/reufpi/article/view/2233

Similar Articles

<< < 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.