Missing children are children whose whereabouts cannot be established and where the circumstances are out of character, or the context suggests the person may be subject of crime or at risk of harm to themselves or another.[1] A child can be separated from parents or custodian either accidentally, when they run away, or when they are abducted, abandoned, injured, trapped[2] or deceased.[3]
In contrast to the plight of missing persons in general whose primary vulnerability is the lack of support from their close social groups, the vulnerability of a missing child is at once social, biological and cognitive.[4][5] A child gone missing is an emergency as their tender age predisposes them to unexpected and serious harm.[6] Also, the plight of a parent who has missed a child is often among the most agonising of the human conditions, as they do not know whether the child is safe or unsafe, dead or alive.[7]
Children are the most precious possessions of citizens and instances of missing children are among the most evocative issues in society.[8][9] The cases have attracted much attention in media[10] as well as popular culture[11].The failure of agencies to rescue missing children in time has often witnessed massive reprisals from people[12] and this has precipitated grave political situations such as what followed the Kidnapping of Alexandra Măceșanu and Luiza Melencu when the death of the child led to massive public protest and extracted a heavy political toll on the government.[13] In the United States, the disappearance of Etan Patz led to a series decisions at the national level including the declaration of the National Missing Children's Day[14]. Nobel Committee underlined the importance of addressing the issue of missing children when it awarded Nobel Peace Prize to Kailash Satyarthi.[15]
Causes
Children become classified as missing when it is unclear to their parents or guardians where they are for an extended period of time, though missing children also includes those who have been abducted by their parents or relatives outside of lawful agreements. Causes include cases when a child is injured and cannot be found, kidnapped, has run away, or become lost.[3]
Consequences
Most children reported missing are located quickly[16][17].[18] Missing children enjoy massive goodwill from society and generally receive care and sympathy of the general public and more people come forward to help them than harm them.[19] However, as long they remain missing, their tender age, lack of physical strength, social skills and cognitive development predisposes them to harm from accidents, criminals, criminal tendencies. This can lead them to suffer injuries, violence, recruitment into criminal gangs, child labour, slavery, and in rare cases death.[20]
Rescue
The time at which a child should be considered missing is defined as the time when the parents or custodians reports the child is missing. Any delay in launching a rescue can be lethal or even fatal for the child; the initial hours are the most productive hours for the rescue. The following strategies have been adopted or proposed to be adopted in rescue of missing children.
Public alerts (such as the Amber Alert that was introduced in the United States and later adopted in countries from Canada to UK to Slovakia to China to Australia) and crowdsourcing.[21]
Police Investigation: Early intervention, community involvement, examination of child's parents, friends and teachers, inter-agency coordination, especially with railway police, border police, transport agencies etc. are some of the strategies adopted by Police.[22] Standard Operating Procedures exist in many jurisdictions[23]
Rescue during crowd gathering: Children getting separated from parents during mass gatherings is a common challenge encountered by Police. Radio Frequency wrist bands, intelligent video surveillance systems[24] etc. have been employed to prevent and locate missing children during such gatherings[25]:
Databank for missing children and found children
Legal provisions for mandatory reporting of found children: Many jurisdictions have punitive provisions incorporated into statutes(eg: Juvenile Justice -Care and Protection of Children- Act, 2015, India) for not reporting details of found children to designated systems.
Rescue Drives
DNA matching: This can be employed in suspected cases[26] as well as by creating a DNA bank of parents of missing children to match against DNA bank of found children[27]
Deep Learning-Enabled Missing Child Identification[28]
As the reasons for missing children vary across geographies, understanding the characteristics of children who go missing on a regular basis is an important first step in developing prevention strategies[29][30] . As the studies so far indicate a propensity for children of parents facing mental health challenges and parental conflict, children who are victims of various kinds abuse to go missing, prevention programs to identify, screen, and engage high-risk families can be productive.[31]
↑ El Alaoui El Abdallaoui, Hasna; Abdelaziz, El Fazziki; Mohamed, Sadgal (2016). "Finding a lost child using a crowdsourcing framework". 2016 4th International Conference on Control Engineering & Information Technology (CEIT). IEEE. pp.1–6. doi:10.1109/CEIT.2016.7929047. ISBN978-1-5090-1055-4.
This page is based on this Wikipedia article Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.