The conference met in Geneva in the summer of 1931, between 22 and 25 June. It is considered a turning point in western attitudes to childhood in Africa: "this conference reconstructed the images of childhood in Africa among missionaries, child welfare humanitarians and social scientists".[2] There were only five Africans among the participants, although even this level of participation was unusual at the time.[3] One of these was
Jomo Kenyatta of the Kikuyu Central Association.[4] Kenyatta wrote about the conference later, on the subject of
circumcision and
female genital mutilation, which he defended as a cultural practice among the Kikuyu:
"In this conference several European delegates urged that the time was ripe when this "barbarous custom" should be abolished, and that, like all other "heathen" customs, it should be abolished at once by law."[5]
Other African representatives were teacher and writer Gladys Casely-Hayford, daughter of the Ghanaian politician
J. E. Casely Hayford, and Nigerian educator
Henry Carr.[6] Another black speaker was the American activist
James W. Ford of the
League Against Imperialism, who gave a speech criticising the conference for merely supporting the colonial order.[7]
The conference secretary was writer
Evelyn Sharp, who wrote a book about it called The African Child. Another contributor was a missionary, Dora Earthy.[8]
^Hilde Nielssen, Inger Marie Okkenhaug, Karina Hestad-Skeie, Protestant Missions and Local Encounters in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Unto the Ends of the World (BRILL, 2011) page 237.
^Robert Kwame Ame, DeBrenna LaFa Agbényiga, Nana Araba Apt, Children's Rights in Ghana: Reality or Rhetoric? (Lexington Books, 2011) page 23.
^Robert Kwame Ame, DeBrenna LaFa Agbényiga, Nana Araba Apt, Children's Rights in Ghana: Reality or Rhetoric? (Lexington Books, 2011) page 23.
^Robert J. Holton, Global Networks (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007) page 160.
^Jomo Kenyatta, Facing Mount Kenya, the Tribal Life of the Gikuyu, (Secker and Warburg, 1938) page 131, cited in Richard A. Shweder, Why Do Men Barbecue?: Recipes for Cultural Psychology (Harvard University Press, 2003) page 175.
^Abosede A. George, Making Modern Girls: A History of Girlhood, Labor, and Social Development in Colonial Lagos (Ohio University Press, 2014) page 1926.
^Holger Weiss, Framing a Radical African Atlantic: African American Agency, West African Intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers (BRILL, 2013) page 405.
^Patrick Harries, David Maxwell, The Spiritual in the Secular: Missionaries and Knowledge about Africa (Eerdmans, 2012) page 205.
Sources
Proceedings of the International Conference on African Children, Geneva, June 22–23, 1931 (Save the Children, 1932)
Evelyn Sharp, The African Child: An Account of the International Conference on African Children, Geneva (Longmans and Co. / Weardale Press, 1931)
ISBN978-0837150956
Dominique Marshall, 'Children's Rights in Imperial Political Cultures: Missionary and Humanitarian Contributions to the Conference on the African Child of 1931', in The International Journal of Children's Rights, Volume 12, Issue 3, pages 273 – 318 (2004).