All projects working with children have a responsibility to put safeguarding measures in place. The main goal is to keep children safe, but it's also important to remember that the reputation and success of your program depends on this.
Most skateboarding projects have chosen to work with children from difficult situations. This presents extra challenges and extra responsibilities (both within your programs and what children face externally).
Definition: “The prevention of and response to abuse, neglect, exploitation and violence against children” (Source: Child Protection Working Group).
Child protection refers to some parts of the UN Declaration of Child Rights, such as safety and non-discrimination. The Declaration gives the guiding principle in child protection: What are the best interests of the child?
Example Elements of Child Protection:

What is a CPP?
Every organization should create a CPP that reflects its own needs. Many have common elements, such as defining key terms, staff and recruitment, behaviour protocols, visitor/media guidelines, partnerships, and reporting procedures. Here's a CPP template example we have created just for social skateboarding projects that you can adapt and use for your own initiative!
There are many great organizations working with vulnerable children and their families. There are also many organizations operating without proper child protection policies in place, including some that fail to check the backgrounds of their short and long term visitors. This leaves children open to mistreatment and abuse, no matter how short their visit.
Safe Partnership Practices:
Media Visit Best Practices:
For example, at Skateistan, every person who is part of a media visit must sign the organization’s media guidelines and agree to follow the CPP i.e. only taking photos that show children in a positive light, not singling out individual children, not using real names, ensuring parent consent before taking photos. Every student must also be approached in their native language and give their own permission before having their photo or video taken by any media personnel. Additionally, when each student registers, parents/guardians are asked whether or not they give permission for their child to appear in both externally- and internally-produced media.

Recruitment Best Practices:
A Note about “Voluntourism”:
Each skate project and skatepark is different and will have different considerations to take into account to ensure children are safe. Below are a few examples of skatepark best practices:

Goodpush
Goodpush Child Protection Quick Guide (PDF)
Participant Registration/Waiver Form – Example (docx)
Goodpush Child Protection Policy Template (docx)
Child Protection Pledge – Example (PDF)Code of Conduct for Staff/Volunteers – Example (PDF)
Media Agreement – Example (PDF)
Injury Report Form – Example (PDF)
Child Protection Recruitment Questions - Example (PDF)
Skateboard Project Volunteer Agreement – Example (PDF)
Goodpush Child Protection Webinar (Youtube)
External
Safeguarding Children in Sport (Sportanddev.org)
Child Protection in Sport Guideline (streetfootballworld)
International Safeguards for Children in Sport (PDF)
Safe Spaces for Girls – Guide (WomenWin)
Sport for Protection Toolkit (UNHCR/International Olympic Committee)