The Rights of the Child were formally recognized after the First World War with the adoption of the Geneva Declaration in 1924. The process of recognition of these rights then continued through the work of the United Nations and the Declaration of the Rights of the Child. from 1959.
The acceptance of the Rights of the Child was definitively concluded on November 20, 1989 with the acceptance of the International Convention on the Rights of the Child, which represents the first international commitment text that legally recognizes all the fundamental rights of children.
Thanks to social movements it emerged in the 19th century. Then came the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Among them are the intellectual movements and the 1929 Geneva Convention.
These rights are based on human rights but have particularities due to the importance of the vulnerable situation of infants or children. So; Try to guarantee and protect these, as human beings specially oriented to access certain essential aspects for decent development. With a set of rules of international law that protect and provide legal protection to people up to the age of majority. Each of these rights is adapted and adjusted to the specificities, needs and fragility of the children's age.
They are inalienable and no person or individual can in any way devalue, ignore or violate them. In other words, they are guaranteed by global standards and backed by international agreements.