Children Act Now
From the collection of
From the collection of
Know your rights and use them! Advice from young people for other young people in and after care.
Young people and staff from the 10 local authorities in Greater Manchester worked with the Workers' Film Association to make this campaigning video. It was produced in response to the 1989 Children Act, which was designed to ensure children in care were safeguarded and their welfare promoted. The video lists rights that everyone in care should know, such as the right to access information about yourself, the right to complain, and after-care rights for those no longer looked after by the local authority. Using dramatised scenarios to demonstrate the way issues should and shouldn't be tackled, the young filmmakers make a strong case for their voices to be heard and their concerns taken seriously.
Young people in care in Greater Manchester have their say on how the Children Act of 1989 should be carried out.
The relationship between activism, protest and the moving image goes back almost to the beginning of the medium. Suffragettes and peace movements in the 1910s recognised its potential to document and advocate for a cause, and ever since, activist movements, workshops and co-operatives have been creating and curating moving image to give voice to concerns, critiques, and histories not adequately served by mainstream media.
The time span of the material on BFI Replay covers a period of intense protest and socio-political awakenings (and reckonings). Many of the movements shaping the activist landscape in the UK in the 1980s were intrinsically tied to the affordances of videotape, and the ability to document and represent themselves. Various, and perhaps previously unseen, forms of ‘organising’ could be shown, such as the miners’ wives who shouldered their communities and built solidarity: in the tapes dedicated to them we see social and political activation unfurling in front of our eyes.
And we can still see a tug-of-war between the view from the outside, and from within. Channel 4 was key to funding video workshops, and LWT created the London Minorities Unit, but the power of self-organising, teaching how to film, interview and give your own account, and videotape’s rapid response meant people’s protest films could speak for themselves. So turn on, tune in, and stand up for your rights.