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Posted: 28 November 2002 | Subscribe Online


Kenneth Leech has lived as an Anglican priest in the East End of London for much of his life, working with homeless people, people who are drug dependent and young people who live on the streets.

For Leech the East End is a microcosm of our postmodern urban condition: a place of refuge, settlement and transition where a multitude of peoples share experiences of exile and loss but also rebuild community amid conflict and social turbulence. His opening chapters set this context by examining the impact of successive waves of immigration - Huguenot, Jewish, Irish, south Asian - and the accompanying commerce.

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Leech's best pages outline a theology of social engagement with urban neighbourhoods. Churches, mosques and synagogues are "anchor institutions" providing the social glue for neighbourhoods swept by relentless change. Understanding other faiths - particularly Islam in which he finds much that is helpful - is important.

In his approach much work is to be done with the excluded - he tells movingly of a priest who tended to those dying of Aids before succumbing himself.

Finally, he lays out the different modes of politics in which the church may engage, including the politics of retreat, radicalism and revolution. All are needed.

John Pierson is co-editor of Rebuilding Community (Palgrave, 2001)

 

Alan Bennett was right. It is a good job that childhood does not happen to us later in life - we would never be able to cope with it. As a manifesto, produced by Barnardo's and other child care charities asserted, although children and young people under 18 make up one quarter of the population, their rights and well-being are rarely given the priority they deserve.

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A quarter of the world's children live in poverty: globally, more than 130 million children have no access to basic education and 800 million children lack access to health services. These basic rights - and many more - are brought together in what is an indispensable source book on the rights - or lack of them - experienced by children and young people.

In this welcome handbook, Jeremy Roche contributes a useful overview of the Children Act 1989, Jane Fortin looks at The Human Rights Act 1998 and Michael Freeman writes 10 years on from the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

What makes this book so invaluable is not only its consideration of often ignored children - such as carers and disabled children - but also its global perspectives.

This is an essential textbook for anyone concerned with the inherent rights of children.

Chris Hanvey is UK director of operations, Barnardo's



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