400 million under-fives regularly experience violent discipline at home
Six in ten children under five years old worldwide regularly endure psychological aggression or physical punishment at home, according to new UNICEF estimates. Of these nearly 400 million under-fives, 330 million are punished by physical means.
Six in ten children under five years old worldwide regularly endure psychological aggression or physical punishment at home, according to new UNICEF estimates. Of these nearly 400 million under-fives, 330 million are punished by physical means.
“When children are subjected to physical or verbal abuse at home, or when they are deprived of social and emotional care from their loved ones, it can undermine their sense of self-worth and development,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.
The UNICEF data was released on Tuesday on the first-ever International Day of Play (IDOP). It reveals many young children are deprived of play, stimulation, and interaction with their parents and caregivers. The UN children’s agency is calling on governments to strengthen legal frameworks and provide greater investments in evidence-based parenting programmes and play spaces for children.
Violent discipline at home
While more and more countries are prohibiting physical punishment against children at home, around half a billion under-fives are still left without adequate legal protection. Harmful social norms underscore violent child rearing practices, according to UNICEF. Slightly more than one in four mothers and primary caregivers expressed that physical punishment is necessary to raise children.
The data found that approximately four in ten children aged two to four years do not get enough stimulation at home, indicating emotional neglect that may lead to detachment, insecurity, and behavioral issues in adulthood. Meanwhile, one in ten misses out on activities with their caregivers that are critical to development, such as reading, storytelling, singing, and drawing.
The findings also show many children do not play with their caregivers and have no toys at home.
First International Day of Play
The first International Day of Play highlights the crucial role of play on human development across cognitive, social, emotional, and physical growth.
“Nurturing and playful parenting can bring joy and also help children feel safe, learn, build skills, and navigate the world around them,” Ms. Russell said.
The IDOP also stresses the persisting obstacles to children’s ability to play, such as disabilities, gender discrimination, conflict, and learning poverty.
UNICEF is urging governments to do more to tackle these challenges, calling for better legal and policy frameworks to end all forms of violence against children in the home. It also is insisting on an expansion of evidence-based parenting programmes and expanded access to learning and play spaces for children.
“On the first International Day of Play, we must unite and recommit to ending violence against children and promoting positive, nurturing, and playful caregiving,” Ms. Russell announced.
© UN News (2024) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: UN News
Where next?
Browse related news topics:
Read the latest news stories:
- The Mideast Conflict Spreads—Beyond the Strait of Hormuz & towards the UN Cafeteria Friday, May 08, 2026
- Cleaning Up the Fields: Across Africa and Asia GEF is Helping Farmers Rewrite Their Pesticide Story Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Why it is Time to Rewrite Africa’s Malaria Story Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Data Gaps are Hiding the Most Excluded Children Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Bahrain and US float Security Council resolution on the Strait of Hormuz Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Oil, plastics and climate: Why higher prices could speed a materials transition Thursday, May 07, 2026
- World News in Brief: Somalia drought response, Gaza and Ukraine aid updates, human rights abuses in Tunisia Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Lebanon: Fresh strike on Beirut suburbs ‘a very alarming development’ Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Countries make progress on migration pact, but more work remains Thursday, May 07, 2026
- Hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship not ‘another COVID’, WHO says Thursday, May 07, 2026
Learn more about the related issues: