Irish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children

Irish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
Type Child protection
Tax ID No. 15958
Registration No. CHY 5102
Founded January 18, 1956 (1956-01-18)
Location Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Origins National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
Revenue €6.5million (2010)
Volunteers 469
Employees 117
Motto "Always here for children"

The Irish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (ISPCC) is an Irish charity that advocates for children's rights and provides services for children in need. It was founded as a successor to the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children which had operated in Ireland from 1889 to 1956.[1]

The first Irish branch of the NSPCC was founded in Dublin in May 1889, with branches founded in Cork and Belfast in 1891.[1]

Contents

History

Inspectors

Each branch of the NSPCC and ISPCC had an inspector who was paid a salary and was provided with a house that doubled as a local office.[1] Their job was to investigate child abuse or neglect.[1] They were nearly all men and were recruited from the ranks of retired army personnel and police.[1] Each answered to a local committee of volunteers.[1] A brown uniform was worn by inspectors and they were popularly known as "cruelty men".[1]

Inspectors acted independently and were not answerable to the branch committee, though they were answerable to the honorary secretary of the committee, though the onus was on the inspector to communicate with superiors.[1]

Social conditions

From the 1930s to the 1940s many people lived in squalid conditions.[1] From the 1930s to the 1950s reports by the society graphically described the conditions that people lived in, as well as advocating that children moved from their families live with new families rather than be sent to industrial schools.[1] When John Charles McQuaid became a patron of the society in 1956 the criticism of industrial schools advocacy of adoption and case studies vanished from reports.[1] Membership also changed under McQuaid, who had targeted traditionally Protestant organisations such as the ISPCC and recruited larges numbers of Catholics who then gained positions of control.[2]

Change in role

In 1968 social workers took over the role of inspectors and in 1970 the Health boards took over other functions of the society.[1]

Industrial schools

Both the NSPCC and ISPCC had a role in committing children to industrial schools, though the exact extend is not clear because of lack of records - the society states that some were lost in a fire in their office in 1961 and some may have been lost in the changeover from the NSPCC in 1956.[1] Frank Duff criticised the society in a letter to John Charles McQuaid in 1941.[1]

The Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse concluded that the society had played an important role in committing children to industrial schools, though the exact extent is unclear as some reports are missing.[1] Poverty was the main reason children were committed to residential care - the idea of supporting families with financial aid was advocated by the society as early as 1951.[1]

Services

The ISPCC operates several services for children: the Irish Childline, Leanbh - a service dealing with children who beg, Childfocus - a service supporting children under 12 with emotional difficulties, and Teenfocus - a service supporting teenagers with emotional difficulties and a Mentoring Support Project to support children, teenagers and parents or guardians.[3][4][5][6][7]

The ISPCC also advocates for children's rights.

Funding and expenditure

In 201 the ISPCC had an income of €6.5 million.[8] It spent more than one third of this on fund-raising and promotion.[9][10]

Controversies

In 1999 ISPCC Chief Executive Cian O Tighearnaigh resigned his post following accusations of fraud in relation to non payment of commissions to collectors.[11] He gained an injunction barring the DPP from bringing a prosecution against on the grounds that the delay in instituting criminal proceedings had prejudiced him in obtaining a fair trial.[12]

In September 2011 an ISPCC advert titled "I Can't Wait Until I Grow Up" featuring a young boy being repeatedly assaulted by a man was banned by the Advertising Standards Authority for Ireland (ASAI) for breaching rules on gender equality. The ASAI noted that previous adverts by the charity also solely featured male abusers and that "the portrayal of only male characters as the abusers was in breach of the provisions of the Code". The code states that "marketing communications should respect the principle of the equality of men and women" and "should avoid sex stereotyping and any exploitation or demeaning of men and women". The ISPCC technically complied with the ruling by removing the video from it's own website but neglected to remove the banned video from Youtube and claimed that the decision would make it difficult for them to produce material on child abuse in future.[13][14][15]

Ambassadors

The list include: Brian O'Driscoll, Colin Farrell, Damian Duff, Grainne Seoige, Ian Dempsey, Louis Walsh, Martin King, Mary O'Rourke, Mikey Graham, Miriam O'Callagahn, Pat Kenny, Robbie Keane, The Script, and Westlife.[16]

References

See also

External links