At Work on Issues

Addressing the Needs of Children and Youth

While parents have the primary responsibility for raising their children, we all have a role in helping our nation's young people to achieve their full potential. Mrs. Clinton has used her voice as First Lady to remind Americans of our responsibility for helping all our children, particularly those who are most vulnerable.

As the Administration's most prominent advocate on foster care and adoption, Mrs. Clinton has worked on behalf of the over 500,000 children who live in foster care because of abuse or neglect. She has promoted the adoption of children living in foster care and worked for passage of the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997, landmark legislation which reformed our nation's child welfare system by putting considerations of children's health and safety first.

Mrs. Clinton has also taken a special interest in educating Americans about the importance of children's earliest experiences to their future development. In 1997, she hosted the White House Conference on Early Childhood Development and Learning: What New Research on the Brain Tells Us About Our Youngest Children. She has worked for Head Start expansion and quality improvements and successfully advocated for increased funding for programs serving young children. In 1997, the First Lady launched the Prescription for Reading Partnership in which pediatricians and other health professionals "prescribe" reading to new parents as an activity that will enhance children's development.

Mrs. Clinton has also directed her attention to our nation's youth, encouraging the development of positive opportunities for young people and ways to help them avoid substance abuse, teen pregnancy and delinquency. She helped to launch the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy and hosted the 1998 White House Conference on School Safety: Causes and Prevention of Youth Violence and participated in the recent White House Strategy Meeting on Children, Violence and Responsibility. The First Lady was also instrumental in the development of the AmeriCorps National Service Program through which young people may perform a year of full-time service in exchange for scholarships or student loan forgiveness.

 

Below is more detailed information on specific children and youth issues:

Early Childhood Development

  • Address to the National Association of American Publishers on the Importance of Reading to Children (3/18/99)
  • Reach Out & Read Announcement in New York City (12/1/98)
  • Remarks at the White House Conference on Early Childhood Development (4/17/97)
  • Remarks at the Georgetown Medical Center on Child Development (1/10/97)

    For more information on this topic, please visit the Head Start Bureau at the Department of Health and Human Servics and the National Institute on Early Childhood Development and Education at the Department of Education.

  • Foster Care and Adoption

  • Remarks at the Launch of the National Adoption Campaign (12/20/99)
  • Remarks by the President and First Lady at the Signing of the Foster Care Independence Act (12/14/99)
  • Column on Adoption Legislation (9/29/99)
  • Remarks by the President and First Lady at Adoption Legislation Event (9/24/99)
  • Remarks at the White House Foster Care Transitioning Event (1/29/99)
  • Column on National Adoption Day (11/25/98)
  • Remarks at the White House National Adoption Month Event (11/24/98)
  • Remarks on Foster Care at the Destination Future 98 Conference (9/11/98)
  • Remarks by the President and First Lady at the Adoption Bill Signing (11/19/97)

    For more information on this topic, please visit the Children's Bureau at the Department of Health and Human Services.

  • Youth

  • Column on the Million Mom March (5/10/2000)
  • Column on the White House Conference on Teenagers (5/03/2000)
  • Remarks at the White House Conference on Teenagers (5/02/2000)
  • Column on Teen Smoking (3/29/2000)
  • Column on Children and Guns (3/8/2000)
  • Remarks at the Launch of the D.C. Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy (2/23/2000)
  • Column on D.C. Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy Launch (2/23/2000)
  • Remarks on the Covenant for the Prevention of Violence, Elem Youth Center, Kfar Saba, Israel (11/10/99)
  • Remarks at the "From Violence to Dialogue" Conference at Tel Aviv University (11/10/99)
  • Column on Youth Violence (8/18/99)
  • Column on the White House Convening on Hispanic Children and Youth (8/4/99)
  • Remarks from Good Morning America's Special on School Violence (6/4/99)
  • Column on Youth and Violence in the Media (6/2/99)
  • Remarks on Children, Violence and Marketing (6/1/99)
  • Column on Youth, Violence and Guns (5/12/99)
  • Remarks after the White House Strategy Session on Children, Violence and Responsibility (5/10/99)
  • Column on Guns, Youth and Violence (4/28/99)
  • Remarks on Gun Control Legislation (4/27/99)
  • Remarks on receiving the Albert Shanker Award for Distinguished Service (4/22/99)
  • Column on Girls and Sports (3/10/99)
  • Remarks on Women and Sports, New York City Lab School (3/4/99)
  • Remarks at the People Magazine/Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy Luncheon (12/1/98)
  • Remarks at the White House Conference on School Safety (10/15/98)
  • Column on Juvenile Crime (10/7/98)
  • Remarks to the National Committee to Prevent Child Abuse Awards (10/6/98)
  • Remarks at the Annual National Conference of La Raza (7/20/98)
  • Column on Children and Violence (4/8/98)
  • Remarks on Teen Smoking and Violence in the Media to the Parent Teachers Association, Virginia (3/8/96)
  • Remarks at the National Conference on Youth Violence (8/15/94)

    For more information on this topic, please visit the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquent Prevention at the Justice Department and the Family and Youth Services Bureau at the Department of Health and Human Services.

  • National Service

  • Remarks by the President and First Lady at the AmeriCorps 5th Anniversary Celebration (10/20/99)
  • Column on the Fifth Anniversary of AmeriCorps (10/20/99)
  • Column on National Service (3/17/98)
  • University of Michigan Commencement Address (5/1/93)

    For more information on this topic, please visit the Corporation for National Service.



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