Hello everyone,

I wanted to send out a friendly reminder that the Wikimedia Foundation will be hosting two community conversation hours on 23 February to discuss the recently published child rights impact assessment and, more importantly, to hear your thoughts about the findings and recommendations of the report and to answer any questions you may have. Please register in advance using the links below. If you would like to request translation for this event, we will try our best to accommodate languages that receive five volunteer requests or more. Please send requests for translation to youthsurvey@wikimedia.org by the end of day Monday. 

  • Friday, 23 February at 13:00 UTC
  • Friday, 23 February at: 18:00 UTC

  • I look forward to seeing you next Friday!

    Ricky Gaines
    Senior Human Rights Advocacy Manager
    Wikimedia Foundation

    On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 12:01 PM Ricky Gaines <rgaines@wikimedia.org> wrote:

    Dear Wikimedians,


    On behalf of the Wikimedia Foundation, I am pleased to announce the publication of our first child rights impact assessment (CRIA). This report forms an important part of the Foundation’s long-term efforts to meet the commitments articulated in our Human Rights Policy. The assessment builds upon our 2020 organizational Human Rights Impact Assessment (HRIA), which identified risks to children’s rights as one of five categories of significant human rights risks facing the Foundation and Wikimedia communities. The HRIA recommended that the Foundation undertake a targeted assessment to better understand this category of risks. 


    What is in the report?

    Publishing this CRIA represents a significant step forward in the Foundation’s human rights endeavors. The CRIA was prepared by Article One, a strategy consultancy with expertise in human rights. In it, Article One identifies and analyzes the impacts, risks, and opportunities posed to children that access and participate in Wikimedia projects. It proposes recommendations that the Foundation and Wikimedia’s volunteer community could implement to mitigate those risks, so that children can fully benefit from participating in our projects


    Of the recommendations, the Foundation is positioned to act upon a number of them, while others provide an opportunity for collaboration between the Foundation and the volunteer community to address, and others the volunteer community is better positioned to lead. We hope these recommendations will give us all a basis for dialogue and collaboration around making Wikimedia a safer space for children.


    Making sense of the findings

    To help you digest this report, we’ve prepared a number of resources for you, including:

    • A Diff blog post summarizing the findings of the CRIA and what it means for the movement;

    • A Meta page to serve as the “home” for the report and to provide more background information on the report, including its objectives, the timeline in which it was completed, the methodology that was employed to develop the report, and actions the Foundation has taken since first receiving the report;

    • The full report, which contains a foreword from the Foundation’s General Counsel, an executive summary, a risk analysis, and recommendations. The report is available in English, French and Spanish. 


    Working together to protect child safety on Wikimedia projects

    We want to hear from you on this topic: What questions do you have? What are your thoughts on the risks and recommendations from the report? What is your community already doing, or what would you like to do, to ensure the safety of children on Wikimedia projects? How can we collaborate to make progress? Leave a message on the report’s Talk page or register and join us at either of the two community conversation hours scheduled for the following times:


    If you prefer to ask questions or share information privately, you can also email us at youthsurvey@wikimedia.org. We will take the information we gather across channels to prepare a map of efforts happening across the movement and ideas for collaboration and implementation. We look forward to hearing from you. 


    Thank you,


    Ricky Gaines

    Senior Human Rights Advocacy Manager

    Wikimedia Foundation



    --
    Ricky Gaines (he/him)
    Senior Human Rights Advocacy Manager
    Wikimedia Foundation
    rgaines@wikimedia.org