Marie José Lallart explores the terrible exclusion endured by street children from Africa or elsewhere, victims of war and misery, but also of the fear and the lack of consideration they inspire in the adult world. She shows, on the field, the importance of game and sports for those who are often called sorcerers or criminals, and who wish to be acknowledged as people, while we still wait for governments to control the adults in matters of Children's Rights and Child Abuse. Marie José Lallart explores the terrible exclusion endured by street children from Africa or elsewhere, victims of war and misery, but also of the fear and the lack of consideration they inspire in the adult world. She shows, on the field, the importance of game and sports for those who are often called sorcerers or criminals, and who wish to be acknowledged as people, while we still wait for governments to control the adults in matters of Children's Rights and Child Abuse.
CITATION STYLE
Lallart, M. J. (2004). Les enfants de la rue: Leurs lois. Savoirs et Clinique, 4(1), 59–65. https://doi.org/10.3917/sc.004.0059
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