Last summer Children North East invited 1,200
children and young people, 100 in each North East Local Authority, to
photograph their lives and what poverty looked like where they live.
They took over 11,000 photographs on disposable cameras.
We
asked each group to tell us about their pictures and what they meant to
them and group them into themes.
Lack of money was a regular theme among the children and young people.
It is rare to see children on the streets without shoes these days but no one knows how many children and young people are wearing ill-fitting hand-me-down shoes. Many children and young people thought a win on a scratchcard was potentially a quick way to increase income. “Money, it’s a big problem, if you don’t have money you can’t do anything”
Lack of money was a regular theme among the children and young people.
It is rare to see children on the streets without shoes these days but no one knows how many children and young people are wearing ill-fitting hand-me-down shoes. Many children and young people thought a win on a scratchcard was potentially a quick way to increase income. “Money, it’s a big problem, if you don’t have money you can’t do anything”
The
photographs from the project will be the central focus of a national
conference about child poverty at the Sage, Gateshead on 23rd November
hosted by Children North East and the Webb Memorial Trust. The pictures
will then tour the region.
The project was funded by the Webb
Memorial Trust and managed by Children North East. The purpose of the
project is to bring children and young people’s experiences to the
regional debate about what should be done for the 144,000 children (1 in
4) living in families below the official poverty line in the North East.
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