Submitted by crinadmin on
A landlocked country in the Balkans and part of the former Yugoslavia, Serbia was heavily involved in the brutal wars of the 1990s. The first post-independence president, Slobodan Milosevic, was accused of orchestrating massacres and ethnic cleansing during this fighting and was overthrown by popular protests in 2000. Since then, Serbia has become more accepted as a member of the international community and of Europe, but the political situation remains tense and human rights violations persist - particularly discrimination against Roma people and the ill-treatment of children with disabilities.
Quick Facts
64 Human development index79 Happy planet rankingOrganisations in Serbia
- Aflatoun, Child Social and Financial Education
- Anti-Trafficking Center
- Attorneys for the Rights of the Child
- Belgrade Support To Exploited Children & Youth
- Canadian International Development Agency
- Centar za dečija prava-Kraljevo
- Child Helpline International
- Child Rights Centre Belgrade
- Childhealth Advocacy International
- Coalition of Civil Society Organizations for Monitoring Child Rights in Serbia
- Enfants du Monde - Droits de l'homme (service mineurs)
- Genuine Empowerment of Mothers in Society
- Global Campaign for Education
- Hi Neighbour
- Inicijativa za inkluziju VelikiMali
- International Centre for Child and Youth Studies
- International Society for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect
- Madre, Inc.
- NGO/UNICEF Regional Network for Children in Central and Eastern Europe, Commonwealth of Independent States and Baltic States
- Protector of Citizens, Serbia
- Save the Children Norway
- Save the Children UK
- Society for Psychological Assistance
- SOS Children's Villages International
- South East European Child Rights Action Network
- The Provincial Ombudsman-Autonomous Province of Vojvodina
- UNESCO
- UNICEF - Belgrade
- UNICEF Podgorica
- Uzice Child Rights Centre
- Women's World Summit Foundation
- World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS)
- World Vision - Canada
- Yugoslav Child Rights Centre