The 25th anniversary of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in November
2014 is an appropriate occasion for reviewing its record of achievements and
challenges in protecting children's rights worldwide. Clear accomplishments to
build on are the comprehensive nature of the Convention and its capacity to
accommodate the largely diverse contexts in which its provisions are to be
realized. In addition, widespread and massive law reform is one of the most
tangible achievements stimulated by the Convention. Finally, the existence and
performance of the Committee on the Rights of the Child, charged with monitoring
the implementation of the Convention, has been assessed positively. Most
recently, this was rewarded with the entry into force of the third Optional
Protocol to the Convention, which introduced communications procedures including
individual and state complaints mechanisms. After having reviewed this record of
selected achievements critically, four selected major challenges that still
stand in the way of the fuller realization of the Convention will be presented
more briefly. The main reason for this difference in emphasis is that, on the
whole, the achievements speak more significantly to issues concerning the
progressive development of international law while the challenges are, on the
whole, more of a practical nature. The latter are: the persistence of poverty
and other root causes of many child rights problems; difficulties in permeating
into the private – including domestic and corporate –
sphere where a considerable number of child rights violations occur but which
are still hardly covered explicitly by international human rights law; and
issues concerning the availability of data and resources.