Small Places, Close to Home: A Child's Declaration of Rights: Inspired by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

by Deborah Hopkinson (Author) Kate Gardiner (Illustrator)

Small Places, Close to Home: A Child's Declaration of Rights: Inspired by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Reading Level: K − 1st Grade

The rights of childrenand of all living thingsbegin in small places, close to home.

This is a poetic and moving adaptation of U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights in honor of its seventy-fifth anniversary.

In backyards and city parks, in school and at home—wherever and however we move through this world, we have certain inalienable rights—and it’s up to each one of us to ensure those rights for others, too.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, drafted by Eleanor Roosevelt and signed on December 10, 1948, marked the first time that countries agreed on a comprehensive statement of inalienable human rights. This gorgeous adaptation for children reminds us that universal rights begin in small places, close to home.

We all deserve to live free,

to feel safe,

to belong,

to learn,

to dream.

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This elegantly and accessibly presented book empowers the youngest humans and their accompanying grownups to recognize their rights and safeguard them by extending them equally to others.

Review quotes

Starting with a loving image of a biracial family, this intimate book connects the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the life of the individual child. The author and illustrator have worked together to make young readers aware of the declaration and to ensure that they understand their important role—as inhabitants of their own "small places, close to home," in Roosevelt's words—as members of local communities, countries, and the world vital to the realization of the Declaration's purpose. Quietly powerful. — Kirkus Reviews

Taking its title from Eleanor Roosevelt's 1958 remarks delivered at the United Nations about the 1948 Universal Declaration of Humans Rights she had helped champion, this book informs young children of their own rights and responsibilities as humans. Gardiner's gouache and pencil illustrations have a soft color palette, with pops of yellow and tomato red and demonstrate human rights playing out across a variety of communities. This elegantly and accessibly presented book empowers the youngest humans and their accompanying grownups to recognize their rights and safeguard them by extending them equally to others. — The Horn Book

Deborah Hopkinson
Deborah Hopkinson is the award-winning author of more than seventy nonfiction and historical fiction books. Her writing and programs help bring history and research to life for readers. She holds degrees from the University of Massachusetts and the University of Hawaii and lives in Oregon with her family and a menagerie of pets.

Kristy Caldwell is an illustrator from Louisiana, based in Brooklyn. Her first picture book, Flowers for Sarajevo, was a Kirkus Best Picture Book of 2017. She also has a history of providing graphic art to theater companies and is married to director Kelly O'Donnell.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780063092587
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Balzer & Bray/Harperteen
Publication date
October 03, 2023
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV039220 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Values & Virtues
JUV030000 - Juvenile Fiction | People & Places | General
Library of Congress categories
Civil rights
Children
Legal status, laws, etc
Human rights
Children's rights

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