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Latin American Studies 87
Spring 1999
Mexico: Case Study 1999
Andres Small
CASE STUDY
COUNTRY: Mexico
PROGRAM: Fundacion Casa Alianza Mexico, I.A.P.
LOCATION: Mexico D.F. email: casa_alianza@compuserve.com
It is located in downtown Mexico City, which serves
as a strategic center to have an open house, since the traffic congestion
of the area naturally attracts street vendors and peddlers, who might as
well be street children seeking a stable environment.
SPONSORSHIP OF PROGRAM:
Both national and internationally assisted, several
corporations as well as private individuals fund Casa Alianza. For example,
Bankers Association, E.U., Tupperware, and Asistencia Privada are among
the few that lend a helping hand to this charitable foundation.
HISTORY OF PROGRAM:
Upon being asked by a student why he did not practice
what he preached, Franciscan friar and professor at Manhattan University
Bruce Ritter decided in 1969 to create Covenant House in New York. In 1972,
the current organization was founded, and the name "Alianza" alludes to
the Bible, in which men and women have an alliance with God. After establishing
itself in Guatemala in 1981, Casa Alianza proceeded to other cities in
the United States and Canada, Honduras in 1986, and Mexico in 1988. Panama
also opened a branch in 1986, only to close it in 1992.
APPROXIMATE NUMBER OF CHILDREN SERVED:
Around 4,000 boys and girls in Guatemala, Honduras,
and Mexico take advantage of Casa Alianza every year. In Mexico, the street
educator program reaches out to 1,500 boys and girls each year. The second
stage of Casa Alianza, the Crisis Center, treats an average of 120 kids
per day, providing at least housing, medical, psychological and nutritional
care as well as drug detoxification, HIV-AIDS information, and legal support.
The third stage, which seeks to smooth the transition to home and the children’s
reintegration, deals with 50 children, offering education, apprenticeships,
and incorporation of family members. Finally, Group Homes deal with 14
kids and two educators attempting to make these characters self-sufficient
before they turn 18 years old.
CHARACTERISTICS OF CHILDREN SERVED:
Casa Alianza constantly has contact with street
children with drug addiction problems, total abandonment by biological
parents, and stunted growth, besides the psychological toll to overcome
the extreme poverty, family disintegration, parent alcoholism, sexual and
physical abuse, and abandonment so many of them have gone through. Casa
Alianza views poverty as the most common characteristic, since they blame
family disruption on it. Usually, the children are 7-18 years old, and
originate from rural misery. Primary schooling often lacks, and a 4:1 boy
to girl ratio is found in the streets of Mexico.
HOW CHILDREN ARE RECRUITED/SELECTED:
Street educators constantly round the streets in
an effort to find all the street children they can, and attempt to establish
a relationship with and trust of the street children. The street educators
propose alternatives to the street, and one of them includes the invitation
to shelter in Casa Alianza. This institution emphasizes that all the children
that choose to enter do so at their own will.
PROGRAM SERVICES:
Casa Alianza manages a four-stage program. The
first stage takes place in the street, with the street educators. They
establish a relationship with the children, trying to gain their trust,
and when the time is right, they propose alternatives to the street as
well as information about many of the problems the street children encounter.
As one of the alternatives to the street, Casa Alianza is proposed. The
second stage, the Crisis Center, provides housing, medical, psychological,
and nutritional care to the children that voluntarily enter Casa Alianza.
The priority is immediate attention, although workers intend to persuade
the child to view this open house as a 24-hour home. Therefore, the resulting
third stage is the Transition Homes, in which personal and academic development
are prioritized. Responsibilities and an apprenticeship are given to the
child, in an effort to make the kid self-sufficient as soon as possible,
as well as able to reintegrate with his family. However, family integration
is not always possible, and in that case the fourth stage is available.
Group homes, in which 14 children will live along with two educators, emphasize
harmonious co-existence and independent living. The goal of such programs
is to integrate the children to a normal social life before they turn 18
years old.
FINANCIAL BASIS OF PROGRAM:
The budget for 1998-99 included in thousands of
pesos:
Crisis Shelter $4,302
Group Homes $3,658
Transition Homes $1,758
Substance Abuse Programs $1,262
Family Reintegration $776
Outreach $451
HIV-AIDS $352
Girls Rescue from Prostitution
$322
Psychology and Social Work $239
Crisis Phone Line $187
Research and Publishing $180
Legal Support $118
Currently, Casa Alianza is involved in at least two
fundraising programs. The "financial campaign for 1998-2000 has the objective
of raising 150 million pesos to build a trust. Its interest would guarantee
the continuation of our work, starting by the year 2001, and covering the
operational deficits of 1998-1999 and 2000." Labeled the Capital Funding
Financial Campaign for 1998-2000, and often called "Open a Door to Hope,"
it has the goal of "building an alliance with society to guarantee the
continuity of our institutional commitment with these less fortunate children."
Similarly, another fundraising campaign intends to
gather 7 million dollars through donations. There are three stages to this
campaign, the first involving 2.5 million dollars, and it will maintain
and expand the Crisis Center of Casa Alianza so that the capacity increases
from 45 to 110. The second stage also deals with another 2.5 million dollars,
which will guarantee the running of the Crisis Center, and increase the
number of group homes to 10, as well as aid the development of the 270
children involved in any of Casa Alianza’s programs and the programs themselves.
The third and final stage involves 2 million dollars, which will fund a
trust to finance the future costs of Casa Alianza. Like "Open a Door to
Hope," this program appeals to private individuals and corporations in
many countries.
PHILOSOPHY OR APPROACH:
Along with love, faith, great perseverance, and
commitment, this institution captures its philosophy in the mission statement:
"We, whom recognize the providence and loyalty of God with His people,
have dedicated our lives to alliance between ourselves and the children
we serve, with utmost respect and unconditional love." Another pamphlet
declares the mission of Casa Alianza to be the "answer to the most frequently
seen problem in our city, the devastating images of street children, that
is why, with full conviction and commitment, it opens its doors by offering
these boys and girls a different life option."
The five principles of Casa Alianza are also essential
to its philosophy. These are:
-
Urgencia y Acceso: Under which they provide immediate
and unconditional assistance to street children, making sure they receive
the basic necessities and perhaps even medical and legal support.
-
Santuario: In order to reestablish trust and confidence
in street children, Casa Alianza guarantees safety and protection within
its walls. It is a shelter.
-
Comunicacion de Valores: Through communication of values,
interpersonal relationships will improve. However, it is essential that
when something wrong is pointed out, alternatives are created, proposed
and discussed.
-
Estructura: To counter the chaos in the street and avoid
repression, coercion and promote flexibility, adaptation and congruence
of philosophy, Casa Alianza has esablished a framework for its programs.
-
Opcion: Casa Alianza assumes that street children have
the capacity to differentiate options and choose the most convenient. The
institution believes these children have chosen to live on the street,
and they have voluntarily joined Casa Alianza.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
Casa Alianza recently won the Olof Palme Prize
in 1996, given by the Queen of Sweden "as recognition of its work and dedication
in helping the street children in Mexico in their search for a dignified
life and for its struggle in defending children’s rights."
Casa Alianza’s accomplishments also include: "402
children reintegrated to their original families, 61 living independent
lives, 50 in [their] transitional homes, 84 living in group homes and 110
at the Crisis Center. Casa Alianza reintegrates an average of 10 children
a moth to their families.
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