Straight from the source to professionals
Professionals in schools, kindergartens, leisure activities and support services need to learn directly from children’s knowledge and experiences. To that end, children and youth are invited to present and explain their perspectives directly to professionals and leaders.
Coming August 2026:

Why
do professionals need this knowledge?

How
can professionals get this knowledge?

Challenges
in getting this knowledge
Some highlights from our work in this field:
Changes in practice in the police
ChangeFactory has, since 2018, facilitated opportunities for young people to present knowledge from children to professionals and leaders for police, courts, state attorneys and correctional service. This has been carried out through live presentations, meetings, films, and podcasts.
The work with presenting children’s knowledge to different parts of the justice system has led to changes in practice. Some of these changes include:
- More investigative interviewers allow children to choose who they want to have with them as a support person at the Barnahus
- More investigative interviewers explain who will be observing the interview.
- More professionals understand that there are underlying reasons for why young people become involved in crime.
- More police districts speak with children alone as part of concern conversations.
- More police officers provide children with information before contacting their parents or caregivers.
- More police officers understand the risks associated with using physical force against children.
- More professionals focus on ensuring that youth sanctions and youth follow-up measures contain meaningful support that helps young people stop committing crimes
Changes in practice in mental health services
ChangeFactory has, since 2015, facilitated opportunities for young people to present knowledge from children to professionals and leaders for mental health services. This has been carried out through live presentations, meetings, films, and podcasts.
From 2016 to 2018, ChangeFactory carried out a professional development work involving 32 Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service units across ten hospitals. From 2018-2021 ChangeFactory carried out a professional development work involving 50 municipal mental health services across ten major cities.
The aim was to identify what young people with experience from mental health services and leaders of mental health services considered to be good practice in mental health services.
The work with presenting children’s knowledge to professionals and leaders in mental health services has led to changes in practice. Some of these changes include:
- More professionals meet children with warmth and kindness.
- More professionals understand that children’s behaviour and expressions of distress are responses to painful or difficult experiences.
- More professionals listens more to children’s own views when decisions about support and help were being made.
- More professionals understand how medication is experienced by children and young people, and why it should be a last resort after other forms of help have been tried.
- More professionals have a deeper understanding of how the use of physical force is experienced by children and how it can be prevented.
Changes in practice in child welfare services
ChangeFactory has, since 2011, facilitated opportunities for young people to present knowledge from children to professionals and leaders in child welfare services. This has been carried out through live presentations, meetings, films, and podcasts.
From 2013 to 2018, ChangeFactory carried out a professional development work involving 150 child welfare services together with many dozens of young people. The aim was to identify what young people with experience from the child welfare system and leaders of child welfare services considered to be good practice in child welfare.
The work with presenting children’s knowledge to professionals and leaders in the child welfare field has led to changes in practice. Some of these changes include:
- More child welfare professionals spend time talking with children and actively invite them to express their views.
- More professionals meet children with warmth and kindness.
- More professionals understand that children’s behaviour and expressions of distress are responses to painful or difficult experiences.
- More professionals recognise the importance of working together with children to provide good support and help.
- More professionals have a deeper understanding of how the use of physical force is experienced by children and how it can be prevented.
The latest
Youth from Ukraine and Colombia visiting

Young people aged 15–18 from the Ukrainian Step by Step Foundation (Ukraine), Corporación Memoria y Paz (Colombia), and ChangeFactory (Norway) led a session at a conference in Oslo organized by the Nordic Network for Global Mental Health.
The young people planned the session together online in advance, with support from War Child and ChangeFactory.
The young people explained the importance of giving children living in war and conflict the opportunity to contribute to the communities in which they live, and how this at the same time helps many children and young people achieve better mental health.
The theme of the conference was: From Response to Resilience: Strengthening Mental Health and Psychosocial Wellbeing Before, During and After Emergencies.
Boosting Norwegian municipalities

When politicians, heads of schools, sport teams or municipalities are making decisions that affect children and young people, they are obliged to take seriously the views of and solutions from groups of the children or young people concerned. This is why Changefactory has conducted BOOST events in several Norwegian municipalities this spring. The aim has been to boost and inspire with knowledge and insights from children.
The decision-makers met with young people in Changefactory to listen to them present and explain solutions from groups of children and young people. When children participate meaningfully, everyone benefits. Involving children in decision-making leads to better solutions and outcomes, both for children and for society.

CIDM platform is launched

05/26
The platform welcomes contributions that can strengthen how children are involved in decision-making, including frameworks, guidance, tools, research, reports, or examples of practice. If you are working on something relevant – or know of something that should be included – we would like to hear from you. Please ensure that what you share has permission to share any content, especially when it involves children.
Police officers trained by youth

The police, like all other public services, have an obligation to understand the perspectives of groups of children who have experience interacting with the police when practices are being further developed. This is also wise in order to ensure that the police work in ways that are safe and effective from the point of view of children and young people.
Since 2009, Forandringsfabrikken has gathered experiences and advice from young people who have been in contact with the police. Their responses have been summarized in several reports, including “Justicepros” (2010), “Angry on the Outside, Hurting on the Inside” (2020), and “Not Mean – There`s always a reason” (2021).
In recent weeks, young people with experience of interacting with the police on the street have visited preventive units in two different police districts. The focus has been on how the police can work in ways that feel safe for young people while also working effectively.
Some of the topics presented included:
✔️ What characterizes safe police
✔️ Reasons why young people commit crime
✔️ How the police can create safety and build trust
✔️ How to share information about children in ways that are safe and uphold children’s rights
✔️ How to conduct conversations when the police is concerned in ways that feel safe and helpful

The ChangeMethod inspired the Netherlands

Changefactory (CF) has for more than 15 years invited children and young people around Norway to participate in surveys, using a method called the Changemethod. Authorities, knowledge centers and organisations around Europe have noticed the method for many years. Several now want training in how to use it in their country. CF visited the Netherlands last week to learn about the method. The authorities there are now preparing to conduct more surveys next year.
The Changemethod is closely based on Participatory Learning and Action (PLA), a participatory method used in action research. PLA has been further developed together with young people in Norway, to find tools that engage many children and young people here. The Changemethod takes very seriously that children are different and that groups of children have the right to express their opinion, in ways that are felt safe for them.
Since 2009, more than 16,000 children and young people in Norway have given advice in various types of knowledge acquisition that Changefactory has carried out. Visual and creative tools and dialogues have been used. Both at the beginning and at different periods throughout these years, researchers have been closely linked to the work, especially to CF’s qualitative surveys. In recent years, researchers have also had methodological responsibility for each individual survey.
Presenting at "Reslilience and Trauma" conference

Professionals from all Nordic countries gathered for a conference, organised by the Nordic Association against Child Abuse and Neglect. The theme was “Resilience and Trauma – Responsibility and Hope”.
At the conference, Canadian professor Michael Ungar spoke strongly and clearly about resilience. He explained how working with children exposed to trauma can make the path to coping much shorter.
CF held two short presentations and a symposium, the topics were:
💛 Good quality in Barnahus, seen from the perspectives of groups of children
💛 Without safety, without a chance, about the book and solutions going forwards
💛 Changefactory and Joannahuset – about community and human warmth, important ways to find meaning, cope and process trauma
Thank you to the NFBO board for an exciting conference and we look forward to 2027!!

The Children's Committee specially thanked children from Norway

On 12-13th of May, the Norwegian authorities responded to questions from the committee in Geneva. The committee had taken the input from children under 18 in Norway very seriously. The committee justified several of its questions with knowledge from children, in the reports from the Children’s Committee. They thanked children in Norway in particular for having informed the committee in engaging ways. Tavar and Glorija from CF followed the reporting, to follow how the views of children were important in the hearing.
Norway’s reporting began more than a year ago. Civil society and children have contributed all the way. Changefactory has sent reports to the committee in two rounds, on the status of how children’s rights are secured in Norway, from the perspective of different groups of children in vulnerable life situations, in kindergarten and in school. In February, young people under 18 from the Children’s Committee participated in a pre-session, where they presented the reports and received questions from members of the Children’s Committee.
The committee asked questions about:
🤩How Norway intends to ensure that children’s views are included when laws are made
🤩Why Norway has not secured children’s procedural rights in all laws that apply to children
🤩Why Norway has not secured children’s rights better in barnahus
🤩How Norway intends to secure children’s rights in the health laws
THANK YOU to the Children’s Committee for taking children in Norway seriously🥳


International Academics advance Children's Rights

Changefactory participated in the Biennial Workshop on Developing Research in Children’s Rights and Family Law, which was hosted in the School of Law UCC in Cork Ireland. We met wise, engaged and kind scholars from Japan, the US, Slovakia, Belgium, the Netherlands, the UK and Ireland 🌍
Thanks a lot for two fun days full of discussion on the future of children’s rights!🌟📚⚖️

DCEDIY international seminar in Ireland

Representatives from Hub na nÓg and from the Department of the Taoiseach who explained how children have participated to input into priorities in national budget work.
Ireland is far ahead in the work to systematize taking children and young people seriously in decision-making, at individual and group level. Last week DCEDIY (the Irish Department of Children and Families) invited to an international seminar, to provide information about the work in Ireland and to inspire other authorities and organisations. The different work being done in the different parts of the administration in Ireland and the frameworks they work according to were presented . The Irish center Hub na nÓg, who collects views of children in vulnerable life situations and provides education, also contributed. Laura Lundy’s model for participation has inspired this work.

Professor Laura Lundy together with representatives from the European Commission, OECD and Leon from Forandringsfabrikken
CF council of professionals 2025

Changefactory has several professional councils. The members provide advice on strategic choices and priorities. They also provide concrete input on how knowledge from children can be used wisely, together with research and practical knowledge. We look forward to important dialogues and to receiving input!
These councils consist of talented professionals from different parts of the fields. They come from educational institutions, practices and organizations.
We are so excited to collaborate with our four new professional councils in 2025!
See lists of members below
Professional council for children’s rights

Kirsten Sandberg, Professor Emerita at the Department of Public Law, Faculty of Law, University of Oslo
Lena Bendiksen, Professor at the Faculty of Law, UiT The Arctic University of Norway
Lars Marius Heggberget, Municipal Attorney Trondheim
Christian Børge Sørensen, Chairman of the Board and Special Advisor in Human Rights
Randi Sigurdsen, Professor of Law, Department of Health, Social and Welfare Sciences. Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, University of Southeast Norway
Anna Nylund, Professor and Head of the Research Group for Civil Procedure at the Faculty of Law, University of Bergen
Lise Gro Søreide, District Court Judge Hordaland District Court, Bergen
Professional council for school and kindergarten

Jon Halvdan Lenning, Bullying Ombudsman in Troms County Council
Åshild Viken Wåle, Senior Lecturer in Pedagogy and Deputy Head of Department at the Department of Pedagogy USN
Marit Mjøs, Associate Professor in Pedagogy at NLA University College
Marianne Dahlseng, Office Manager at the Secretariat of FUB and FUG
Solveig Østrem, Professor of Pedagogy at the Department of Kindergarten Teacher Education at OsloMet – Metropolitan University
Ingeborg Hellesnes Uppheim, Municipal Manager for Early Childhood Education in Voss County
Marianne Kolobekken, Principal at Fjellhamar School in Lørenskog Municipality
Erlend Berrum, Principal at Ingieråsen Junior High School in Nordre Follo Municipality
Elisabeth Walsøe Lehn, Senior Lecturer in Pedagogy at Queen Maud’s Memorial University College
Tore Tverbakk, Head of Kindergarten and School in Bodø Municipality
Joakim Caspersen, Sociologist and Head of Research at NTNU Social Research
Rolf Øistein Barman-Jenssen, Head of Unit for Educational Psychological Services (PPT) in Tromsø Municipality
Professional council for children and families

Ingunn Tollisen Ellingsen, Head of the Welfare Research Network, University of Stavanger
Vegard Snartland, Associate Professor / Program Coordinator USN
Gro Ulset, Researcher at RKBU Midt-Norway, NTNU
Reidun Follesø, Professor of Child Welfare
Mogens Albæk, Psychologist, PhD
Inge Nordhaug, Clinical Social Worker in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Nina Bolstad, Head of the Knowledge Center at the Agency for Children and Families
Kathrine Wolla, Head of Child Welfare
Tone Mortensen, Head of Child Welfare
Sissel Mary Frotjold, Head of Child Welfare
Arne Veivåg, Head of Stavanger Emergency Center, Bufetat
Rønnaug Helene Frøiland, Director of the Agency for Children and Families – Bergen Municipality
Professional council for health

Grete Willumsen, Head of the Child and Family Unit, Bodø Municipality
Ane Ugland Albæk, Associate Professor and Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Psychosocial Health, UiA- University of Agder.
Camilla Wright, Head of the Outpatient Section, Trondheim Municipality
Stine Reiersen, Special Policy Advisor at the Norwegian Psychological Association
Kjersti Lillevoll, Associate Professor at the Department of Psychology, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway.
Berit Bartnes, General Practitioner, Nardosletta Medical Center
Arne Kristian Myhre, Specialist in Pediatrics, with special expertise in Social Pediatrics, Consultant at the Children and Adolescent Clinic, St. Olavs Hospital
Trond Velken, Specialist in psychiatry and child and adolescent psychiatry and department head at BUPA, Vestfold Hospital
Miriam Skjæveland Håland, Head, Youth Resource Center, Sandnes Municipality
Ann Karin Swang, Head of the National Group of Public Health Nurses
Kari Dehli Halvorsen, Business Manager at Knutepunkt Strømsø in Drammen
Stig Bjønness, Associate Professor, UiS – University of Stavanger, Faculty of Health Sciences
Project about working on child-friendly processes

Great to work with talented professionals from the Child Welfare and Health Board, and the courts in Bergen Municipality.
CF recently met with the The Child Welfare Tribunal, judges of Norwegian Courts and the Municipality of Bergen in a workshop. The Centre for Discretion and Paternalism (DIPA) at UiB owns the project and this time the theme was CHILD-FRIENDLY PROCESSES.
How can decisions by the child protection system, the Child Welfare and Health Board and the courts work in a child-friendly way? What does it mean that something is child-friendly? What knowledge has to be the basis in order to call something child-friendly?
The Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) take precedence when other Norwegian legislation (special laws) conflicts with the UNCRC. What significance should the UNCRC and the general comments related to the Convention have in discussions about child-friendliness.
The Supreme Court of Norway has said that general comments should be given great weight where it says “shall”. The general comments describe what child-friendliness means. Should this then be given great weight? Such discussions must take place in the PARTICIPATION project, but also in other development work and projects that concern children in vulnerable life situations.

Exciting trip to Belgium and the Netherlands, here from the University of Leiden
PARTICIPATION is a very 🤩exciting🤩 collaborative project between researchers at the University of Bergen, the DIPA Center, and four key partners to ensure good child protection services: 1)The Child Welfare Tribunal, 2) The Norwegian courts and their administration, 3) Bergen Municipality and 4) Changefactory (children and young people).
The following week, members of the Child Welfare Tribunal went to Belgium and the Netherlands to learn more about child-friendly processes. CF participated, to contribute with questions, from the perspective of children. The group visited courts and universities, and the topic was how the rooms and the conduct of conversations with children must be, to be called child-friendly. An important topic was also methods for including children in this work.
Link to the project: https://discretion.uib.no/childrens-right-to-participation/
Danish crisis center for children visiting

From left: Chairman of the CF Board Alexander, Manager of Joannahuset Jette, Lawyer Marie, Development officer Tescha, together with Pros and factory workers from CF
Joannahuset is Denmark’s first crisis center for children. THANK YOU for the inspiring visit!
Last week we had an anticipated visit from Joannahuset from Denmark. Joannahuset is Denmark’s first crisis center for children. We have previously visited Joannahuset and talked to young people who have been there. There, children and young people under the age of 18 can get a place to sleep and legal assistance. Children can stay at the crisis center for 48 hours without the caregivers having to consent, but they are informed that the child is at the crisis center.
There are of course different opinions about this, because Joannahuset is a pioneer for children, also in a European context. Johannahuset is an inspiration and a great wish would be for Norway to have a Johannahuset
The Minister for Children expressed gratitude

Minister for Children, Kjersti Toppe, was at the top of the list of those whom the authors would most like to understand the main aim of the book and the important explanations for the major challenges. These are challenges that exist in Norway related to young people who struggle and who end up in strong support systems. Equally important for the authors who met with the Minister for Children, was for her to understand all the possibilities that now exist, through the concrete solutions proposed in the book. And that both she and the ministry familiarise themselves with these. The authors asked her to consider the proposals carefully in the final part of the work on the Quality Reform. Kjersti and Maren thanked warmly for the book and promised to read it as best they could. Thank you for a great time with you!
The Children's Ombudsman welcomed the book

The Minister for Children, the Children’s Ombudsperson, the Health Inspectorate, the Norwegian Psychological Association and the Norwegian Bar Association have all been given the book “Without safety, without a chance”. They have said that they will read the book, and they have thanked the authors for their work and their courage. In these meetings there have been talk of solutions, and how knowledge in this book can be a big contribution to systems for children and young people improving how they help them.


The Minister for Children, Kjersti Toppe, and authors
The Children’s Ombudsperson, Mina Gerhardsen, and authors


President of the Norwegian Psychological Association, Håkon Skard, and authors
Director of the Norwegian Health Inspectorate, Sjur Lehmann, and authors


Editor Wenche Bjørnebekk and team leader Hilde Erika Lund from the Scandinavian University Press, and authors
Martin Nielsen, Mette Yvonne Larsen and Ida Thommessen from the Norwegian Bar Association, and authors
Well-known psychiatrist frames the conversation

Trond F. Aarre together with five of the book’s eleven authors
“In the first part of this book, eleven young people write about the difficulties they have had in their lives, and how they have experienced measures that were supposed to help them. It is a shocking read. Services that were supposed to be good help have been experienced as the opposite. Young people who needed to be listened to and understood have felt that adults were not concerned with why they were having such a difficult time. Nor were the adults always interested in hearing their views on what could help.
The stories are naturally one-sided, as all credible stories are. The authors are not looking for objective, cold facts. They show us the services from their perspective, and they know very well that there are other ways of looking at this. They understand that it can be difficult to help, and that legislation and organisation set limits to what can be achieved. But something that is repeated in many of the stories is that they do not fully get to express themselves and do not receive the help they need to feel safe.
The quotes from journals, records and reports show us how great a distance there can be between what professionals are concerned with and what young people themselves experience. Regardless of whether the professionals are right from their perspective, the experiences of young people cannot be without interest. Measures that are experienced as useless are rarely of great help. The experiences, of the past and present, of relations and measures, are often absolutely central to understanding what the problem is about. We need to know of these experiences, even when they do not fit well with the services’ understanding of themselves. Knowledge of how services are experienced by those who will use them is indispensable knowledge for those who want to improve and develop the services.
In the second part of the book, the young people summarise the difficulties that can be experienced in dealing with the systems. This is based on their own experiences, but also on the results of surveys conducted by Changefactory, in which several thousand children and young people in public services have participated. Lastly comes what may be the most important thing in this book: the call to learn from the experiences the young people have had, and proposals for solutions. They want to help the services to meet young people who come after them, in ways that they themselves would like to have been met. They ask for a different form of professionalism than the one they themselves encountered.
The eleven young people therefore deserve congratulations and thanks for wanting to share their experiences with us. It is commendable that they are not content with pointing out what is not working so well, but also come up with proposals for how things can be improved. As I understand them, they are not concerned with getting revenge or redress, but want to do what they can to ensure that services are better for those who come after them. To achieve this, they must explain how things are connected. They must be allowed to describe what they have been subjected to, how they were met, and what is needed to make things better.
Most of the young people appear as authors with names and pictures. This has been each individual’s choice. I can assure the reader that they know what they are doing. Most have been active in Changefactory’s work to convey the views of children and young people on how school, child welfare, police and health services work for them. I know several of them personally through many years of collaboration with Changefactory. The individual author or their guardians have done what they thought was best, without others influencing their choice. We must believe that they themselves know what is best for them.
Changefactory has done pioneering work over the past 20 years by collecting experiences from young people’s contact with public services. There are few countries that can point to anything similar. I am currently a board member of Changefactory and have a special responsibility to ensure that it is safe for children and young people to participate in Changefactory’s many activities. I know the routines and the work the organisation does to ensure that it is safe to participate. The young people who come forward with their names and pictures know what it means. They believe that it is they themselves who should make this choice. I agree with that.
I myself am critical of many of the mediacoverage in which more or less well-known people “come forward” with the ailments they have. This book is about something different and more important. The eleven young authors do not want to get attention or sympathy from others. They are not looking to “give the disease a face” or raise awareness about one or another problem they have struggled with. As I understand it, they present themselves with names and pictures because anonymity does not serve their cause. They would rather be individuals – living people with their own identity, each with their own values and preferences, each with their own personal story and each with their own difficulties. In their encounters with help services, they have experienced to a greater extent that they have been seen as representatives of a group of people, rather than as individuals with unique, personal stories.
I hope that you, who read the book, will be open to the authors’ experiences. They should be food for thought for everyone who works in the support system, and those who are responsible for managing the services. The experiences indicate that it is useful to think a little differently about the services and about those whom the services are intended to help. It seems obvious that the way in which young people are met does not always work as intended.
This is a challenge for all of us. The authors should be commended for doing their part to ensure that students, professionals, leaders and governments can see that much needs to change. But even if much in this book may seem negative, I would like to remind you that we live in good times – and finally take into account what the users of the services think. This is the only way we can change what the help services offer for the better. In order to do so, the experiences of people must emerge. This must also apply to those who are young and therefore have not always been listened to by those of us who think we are older and wiser. This is an important book that shows both how services can affect children and young people, and how they can be improved.
Les Arcs-sur-Argens, May 2024″
Trond F. Aarre,
specialist in psychiatry and drug and addiction medicine

"Without Safety, Without a Chance"

11 young people are the authors of a new book at Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget). There are 11 of us who have used drugs, run away, had eating disorders, used violence, committed crimes and attempted suicide. We have been locked up, held down, forcibly medicated and been moved around a lot.
This book has been written to help more children and young people get help that helps them, to have lives worth living. We have to be met as people who need safety. Without safety, without a chance.
Each of us has cost the state millions of Norwegian kroner every year. At the same time, we have lost precious time in our lives. Much of the help we received created damage in us, both then and later in life. Without safety, without a chance
The book provides clear solution proposals based on answers from CF’s surveys. It provides valuable advice on how to meet young people in vulnerable life situations. It is written for politicians, authorities, managers, professionals and students. When we felt safer, we could accept help and have lives worth living.
See, browse and buy the book here
Laura Lundy inspired Norway on October 24th, and we are grateful

On 24 October, on UN Day itself, Oslo was visited by Professor Laura Lundy. We believe this marked the start of a new era in Norway for Article 12 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Norway is good at many of children’s rights, but not at Article 12. You should, and can be. There is no question if this should be done, only how. Norway should build further on good experiences made by different stakeholder, Laura says.
Laura Lundy from Northern Ireland has inspired more than 10 countries in and outside Europe to take major steps to ensure that affected groups of children under the age of 18 are involved in all important decisions that affect them, both locally and nationally. She has also inspired the World Health Organisation (WHO) and guided the European Commission.
Laura has written the book “Voice is not enough” where she emphasises that a society must listen to the views of children and young people, assess and emphasise this, and give them real influence in decisions that concern them as a group. She particularly emphasises the importance of involving groups of children in vulnerable life situations. Laura has developed a model to guide anyone who makes decisions for children, at a national or local level, or in the everyday lives of children. The model is rights-based and emphasises the responsibility that politicians in the parliament, ministries, directorates, municipalities, educational institutions, services, schools, organisations and many more have.
MANY GOOD PEOPLE CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROGRAMME ON OCTOBER 24TH:
Laura Lundy, Co-Director of the Center for Children’s Rights, Professor of Children’s Rights at Queen’s University, Belfast and Professor of Law at University College Cork.
Eli Blakstad (The Centre Party), State Secretary in the Ministry of Children and Families
Grunde Almeland (The Liberal Party), leader of the Family Committee at the Parliament
Ragnhild Male Hartviksen (The Labour Party) parliamentary politician in the Justice Committee
Mina Gerhardsen, children’s representative
Jon Christian Fløysvik Nordrum, researcher Department of Public Law University in Oslo
Sjur Lehmann, director of the Norwegian Health Authority
Christian Børge Sørensen, special advisor for human rights
Elin Saga Kjørholt, senior subject advisor from the Children’s Ombudsperson
Marit Skivenes, professor of political science and part of CF’s board
Arild Bjørndal, professor of social medicine and part of CF’s board
Leon, Vanessa, Glorija, Dania and Celina from CF contributed in dialogues.
THANK YOU for all engaged, wise, solution-focused and forward-looking talks. The theme throughout was how children can contribute to the development of schools and services, initiatives, budgets, legislation and other types of measures.
Many promised that decisions will be better when we include children’s solutions, that children must be involved early enough in decisions, and that you must be open and transparent with how you have assessed and emphasised children’s views. Something that also came up was what mechanisms we should have to stop decisions when we have not first secured the obligation in Article 12 to hear and take seriously the views of children.
Many were grateful that Laura put into words that Norway is not good at involving the groups of children in question and is far from good enough to ensure that children under the age of 18 and children in vulnerable life situations are included in decisions. Now there are many of us who will achieve this together in Norway in the future!


Today’s keynote speeches inspired both presentation and dialogue
Ragnhild Male Hartviksen, politician in the justice committee at the Parliament, with Laura Lundy and young people in CF
Many good people contributed to the program on October 24th:
Laura Lundy, Co-Director of the Center for Children’s Rights, Professor of Children’s Rights at Queen’s University, Belfast and Professor of Law at University College Cork.
Eli Blakstad (The Centre Party), State Secretary in the Ministry of Children and Families
Grunde Almeland (The Liberal Party), leader of the Family Committee at the Parliament
Ragnhild Male Hartviksen (The Labour Party) parliamentary politician in the Justice Committee
Mina Gerhardsen, children’s representative
Jon Christian Fløysvik Nordrum, researcher Department of Public Law University in Oslo
Sjur Lehmann, director of the Norwegian Health Authority
Christian Børge Sørensen, special advisor for human rights
Elin Saga Kjørholt, senior subject advisor from the Children’s Ombudsperson
Marit Skivenes, professor of political science and part of CF’s board
Arild Bjørndal, professor of social medicine and part of CF’s board
Leon, Vanessa, Glorija, Dania and Celina from CF contributed in dialogues.
THANK YOU for all engaged, wise, solution-focused and forward-looking talks. The theme throughout was how children can contribute to the development of schools and services, initiatives, budgets, legislation and other types of measures.
Many promised that decisions will be better when we include children’s solutions, that children must be involved early enough in decisions, and that you must be open and transparent with how you have assessed and emphasised children’s views. Something that also came up was what mechanisms we should have to stop decisions when we have not first secured the obligation in Article 12 to hear and take seriously the views of children.
Many were grateful that Laura put into words that Norway is not good at involving the groups of children in question and is far from good enough to ensure that children under the age of 18 and children in vulnerable life situations are included in decisions. Now there are many of us who will achieve this together in Norway in the future!


Eli Blakstad, State Secretary in the Ministry of Children and Families, with young people in CF
Politicians in the Family and Culture committee, with Lundy and young people in CF


Sjur Lehmann, director of the Norwegian Health Authority, with young people in CF
Mina Gerhardsen, Children’s Ombudsperson, with young people in CF
T H A N K Y O U for all engaged, wise, solution-focused and forward-looking talks. The theme throughout was how children can contribute to the development of schools and services, initiatives, budgets, legislation and other types of measures.
Many promised that decisions will be better when we include children’s solutions, that children must be involved early enough in decisions, and that you must be open and transparent with how you have assessed and emphasised children’s views. Something that also came up was what mechanisms we should have to stop decisions when we have not first secured the obligation in Article 12 to hear and take seriously the views of children.
Many were grateful that Laura put into words that Norway is not good at involving the groups of children in question and is far from good enough to ensure that children under the age of 18 and children in vulnerable life situations are included in decisions. Now there are many of us who will achieve this together in Norway in the future!


Dialogue with contributions from both the audience and the stage, about challenges today and opportunities for how Norway can better secure the obligations under Article 12 of the UNCRC in the future
Contributors from the last part of the day, with Lundy and young people in CF
Laura Lundy visited Norway last October. She inspired many, with her clear message that children under 18 must be taken seriously in decision-making. This applies to every individual child in kindergarten, school, help services, the police and the legal system. It also applies to the groups of children under 18 that are affected, when measures, initiatives and frameworks are to be determined.
Here’s a video with inspiration from Laura Lundy
Pupils in Portugal and Norway give advice about learning

Pupils have both in Changefactory’s and ComParte from Portugal’s work told about how safety in class and at school determines how much they learn. With funds from Erasmus+, we are now collaborating on a project together. The aim is to collect the pupils’ answers about what feels safe in different learning situations.
Throughout the year, pupils from around Norway and around Portugal will participate and develop tools based on the answers from the advice collection. The tools will later be tested in schools and then further developed. They will eventually become part of a platform that can be used in Norway and Portugal, and as inspiration in other countries. It’s so exciting to travel around to schools and meet wise pupils who have so much important knowledge about how the school feels and how pupils can learn better🤩 Here in Norway we are looking forward to hearing the answers from pupils in Portugal!


Pupils who have given advice in the project
Meeting with young people and employees in ComParte, Changefactory, and national authorities in Portugal

The Evidence and Implementation Summit 2023, in Sydney Australia

The conference is now over – THANK YOU to so many interesting speakers for sharing exciting work and ideas! Changefactory had the pleasure of sharing two films that were received and viewed with great interest.
In the two films young people (named as “Pros”) present experiences and advice summarised as knowledge from children about the systems made for children. Professionals, researchers and other contributors also take part in the films:
FILM 1: The idea centres around the importance of how a country needs enough knowledge from children, in order for the authorities to make good decisions concerning children and how researchers can play an important role in ensuring this. The film also presents advice to researchers on how to do this in ways that make it feel safe and important for children to give their honest advice.
FILM 2: The development work, MY LIFE 2013-2021, involved collaborations between professionals in mental health services, child protection services and schools all over Norway and Pros in Changefactory. The work aimed to develop a practice that makes it possible for more children to speak honestly about the most important things professionals need to know in order to be able to collaborate with children about solutions tailored to each child’s individual life.
Including and taking the knowledge from children seriously is crucial in order to make systems made for children helpful and safe.

Visiting the "Youth Day"

This week Changefactory was invited by Netherlands Jeugdinstituut to the national “Youth day” in the Netherlands. Professionals, decision makers and organisations from all over the country participated. Changefactory gave a presentation in the international program, on children’s participation. We talked about the importance of collecting knowledge from bigger groups of children, including vulnerable children – to complement youth panels and councils.
Professionals and organizations from Ireland, Bosnia, Netherlands and Belgium participated and talked about their experiences with youth participation. It was great to meet and listen to colleagues in other countries, to learn about their work 🫶🏽
It was inspiring to be in same the room with so many people understanding the value of lifting up knowledge of a representative group of children before making decisions affecting them, like the Convention on the Rights of the Child obligates us to do.
Seminar about empowering children

The Department of Sociology of Law at University of Lund arranged important conference days last week. We were lucky to witness the seminar “Empowering children and youth through Law and Participation”, with researchers from Brazil, Colombia, Vietnam, India, Ethiopia, Sweden, Denmark and Norway
Very exciting to hear about how children’s participation has different challenges around the world, and how researchers see possibilities for coming closer to genuine, meaningful and equal participation for children. To achieve that, we must dare to ask questions about how adults can prevent or promote children becoming equal citizens
Thank you for wonderful days, especially to Mimi Petersen from Copenhagen and the organisers: Anna Sonander and Per Wickenberg from the University of Lund
Visit from the Netherlands

Last week we were lucky to have a visit from NJR (The Dutch National Youth Council) and Nederlands Jeugdinstituut (Netherlands Youth Institute) at our head office in Oslo. Thank you for spending time with us and for kindly listening to advice from pros