This module introduces police trainers and participants to the legal framework governing child protection and juvenile justice. It focuses on understanding the structure and intent of child-related laws that guide police responsibilities, while practical application is addressed in later modules.
This module is delivered through four linked sessions, moving from broad principles to practical application:
Understanding how international, national and provincial laws fit together and guide police work.
Introducing key international child-rights instruments and the principles they establish for policing practice.
Explaining constitutional protections, criminal law, and key child-specific national laws that directly regulate police conduct.
Clarifying Sindh-specific child protection laws and the legal responsibilities of police within the province.
Each session builds on the previous one and should be delivered in sequence to avoid confusion.
Total module time: 1–1.5 hours
Trainers may adjust timing depending on participant level, training format and availability of time.
✔ Review Module 2 in the Training Manual
✔ Familiarise yourself with the overall structure of the legal framework
✔ Identify common child-related cases encountered by police in Sindh
✔ Review key do’s and don’ts for police under child-specific laws
✔ Coordinate in advance if videos or presentations will be used
✔ Training Manual
✔ Facilitator Guide
✔ Projector / screen
✔ Laptop with presentation and video files pre-loaded
✔ Flip chart / whiteboard
✔ Markers
This module benefits strongly from visual support. Trainers are encouraged to use:
This opening activity is designed to:
This activity sets the tone for the entire module. It is not a test and not a lecture.
The activity uses experience-based reflection to help participants recognise that:
Trainer Action
Ask participants: “In your daily police work, how often do you deal with the law?”
Allow free responses.
Expected answers may include:
Do not comment yet.
Ask a follow-up question:“When you apply the law correctly, what does it do for you as a police officer?”
Write responses on the board.
Possible responses:
Then summarise calmly:
“The law is not there to punish police officers. It is there to protect police officers who act correctly.”
Ask: “When children are involved, does police work become easier or more sensitive?”
Allow a few responses.
Then explain in simple language:
“Because children are more vulnerable, the law gives extra guidance, not extra burden.”
Trainer Action
Ask participants: “Can you name any law or rule that already guides how police deal with children?”
Accept answers without requiring full titles or sections.
Examples may include:
Acknowledge each response positively.
Then state clearly:
“You already know more child law than you think. This module will simply organise it clearly.”
Conclude with the following reassurance messages:
Explain:
“This module focuses on what the law expects from police practice, not on legal language or technical detail.”
This session should be delivered through visual explanation and guided discussion. The aim is to help participants understand how child-protection laws are structured and where police action fits, before moving into specific laws.
Ask participants: “When you deal with children in police work, do you think only one law applies, or more than one?”
Invite short responses and write key words on the board (e.g. one law, many laws, not sure).
Display a simple three-layer diagram on the screen:
International Law
↓
National Law (Pakistan)
↓
Provincial Law (Sindh)
Point to each layer slowly.
Explain briefly:
Emphasise clearly:
Police follow national and provincial law, guided by international principles.
✔ Keep explanations short
✔ Avoid legal language
✔ Reassure participants that details come later