Introduction: social exclusion at the heart of agglomerations
The phenomenon of child homelessness and street homelessness in large cities is one of the most acute indicators of systemic social dysfunctions. It is not a local problem of individual regions, but a global challenge common to megacities in both developed and developing countries. From a scientific point of view, "homeless children" is a collective term that includes two often overlapping but distinct categories: children living on the streets (street children) and children without parental care, living in shelters or residential institutions. Research by sociologists, psychologists, and economists shows that the causes of this phenomenon are multi-level, combining macroeconomic factors, institutional failures, and family dysfunction.
Global epidemiology and structural causes
According to estimates by international organizations (UNICEF, UN-Habitat), there are tens of millions of children around the world whose lives are to some extent connected with the street. However, precise statistics are impossible due to the concealed nature of the phenomenon. Key causes are structural:
Economic inequality and poverty: Rapid urbanization in Asia, Africa, and Latin America leads to mass migration of rural families to cities, where they end up in marginalized areas (slums, favelas). Loss of housing, unemployment of parents, and the need for child labor push children onto the streets. In developed countries, the cause is often social orphanhood, exacerbated by economic crises.
Crisis of the family institution: The breakdown of the family, domestic violence, alcoholism, or drug addiction of parents are direct causes of a child's leaving the home. For many children, the street becomes a less hostile environment than their own home.
Inefficiency of child protection systems: Even in states with a developed social infrastructure (Russia, EU countries), the system of residential institutions often operates on the principle of "carousel", failing to ensure successful rehabilitation and socialization. Graduates of children's homes constitute a significant percentage among adult homeless, creating a vicious cycle.
Psychological and physiological consequences: the price of survival
Life on the streets inflicts catastrophic damage on a child's development.
Psychological trauma: Children experience a complex trauma involving neglect, violence, fear, and insecure attachment. This leads to the development of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety.
Cognitive deficit: Chronic stress and malnutrition directly affect brain development, especially the prefrontal cortex, responsible for self-control, planning, and decision-making. This reduces the ability to learn and adapt.
Social deprivation: The child develops learned mistrust of adults and institutions of power. The only reference group becomes the same street subculture, which leads to criminalization. A so-called "street socialization" with its own code and hierarchy is formed.
Health: High risks of infectious diseases (tuberculosis, HIV, hepatitis), consequences of malnutrition, drug use (often as a way to cope with reality), and injuries.
Comparative analysis of models in different megacities
Approaches to solving the problem differ fundamentally depending on the socio-economic and cultural context.
Rio de Janeiro (Brazil): Favelas are a traditional source of street children. State programs often have a repressive nature, and violence by the police and narco-cartels is an everyday occurrence. However, effective NGOs also operate, such as the "Street" project (Projeto Ruas), which focuses on low-threshold services and building trustful relationships.
Mumbai (India): Here, one of the largest networks of railway stations in the world operates, where thousands of "runaways" live. The organization "Salaam Baalak Trust" provides them with shelters, food, and education right on the stations, using the principle of "mobile social work".
Moscow (Russia): In the 1990s, the problem was extremely acute. Today, it has been largely shifted to a less visible plane thanks to the development of a network of state centers for family upbringing assistance and active work on family placement. However, risks remain for children from crisis families and graduates of residential institutions.
Helsinki (Finland): A country implementing the "Housing First" policy for minors. The emphasis is on early detection of family dysfunction, intensive support for the family, and providing immediate housing in the event of a crisis, which almost eliminates long-term street homelessness for children.
Effective intervention strategies: research data
International experience and academic research highlight key components of successful work:
Prevention and early intervention: Work with crisis families before the point of breakdown. This is the most effective and economically viable approach.
Low-threshold services: Shelters, food, medical care points that do not require immediate document submission or abandonment of the usual lifestyle. Their goal is to establish contact and trust.
Rehabilitation and reintegration: Long-term psychological assistance, education, vocational training. Critically important is the work on restoring the connection with the family, if it is safe, or finding an alternative family (foster care, adoption).
Interagency cooperation: Coordination of actions of social services, police, health and education systems. Without this, the child often "falls through the cracks" between institutions.
Conclusion: from isolation to inclusion
Homeless children are not an anomaly but a symptom of deep fractures in the social fabric of large cities. Their existence demonstrates how economic inequality, institutional fragility, and the crisis of the private sphere of the family produce the most vulnerable social group. Modern effective strategies reject the punitive-isolation approach ("gather from the streets") in favor of individualized social inclusion. This is a long and resource-intensive work, requiring a restructuring of the entire child protection system. Success is measured not only by a reduction in the number of children on the streets but also by creating a city environment where every child has a safe home, access to development, and significant connections with adults, which is not a utopia but a basic right enshrined in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Solving this problem is a test of maturity not only for city administrations but for society as a whole.
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