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Jun 21 - RGP Partners With The Parent Zone

As part of its ongoing process of establishing local and international partnerships with which to enhance service delivery in various areas of policing, the Royal Gibraltar Police have joined forces with UK’s “The Parent Zone” to provide parents and carers with a collection of useful information and resources on a variety of topics, including internet safety.

The “Parent Info” content, which will be accessible through the RGP website www.police.gi, aims to help parents and carers assist their children to be discriminating, web-literate and resilient.

What is Parent Info?

Parent Info is a collaboration between the Child Protection Command of the United Kingdom National Crime Agency (CEOP) and Parent Zone, providing high quality information to parents and carers about their children's well-being and resilience.

This service is free and ranges across a wide range of subject matter, from difficult topics about sex, relationships and the internet or body image and peer pressure to broader parenting topics like ‘how much sleep do teenagers need?’

In line with CEOP’s “Thinkuknow” programme, some of the content covers internet safety, but it all starts from the assumption that young people make little distinction between their online and offline lives and the issues for parents are often the same. The aim is to help parents help their children be discriminating, web-literate and resilient.

The Parent Zone was founded in 2005 and has a track record of providing information, support and advice to parents in the United Kingdom. In recent years, The Parent Zone's work has focused on the impact of digital technologies on families, providing information, resources and training for parents and those who work with them.

CEOP is the Child Protection Command of the United Kingdom National Crime Agency. CEOP reaches over 3 million children and young people a year through its UK-wide Thinkuknow education programme and regularly conveys its vital online safety messages to over 100,000 practitioners (such as social workers, teachers and police officers) registered to their network who in turn cascade these messages direct to children and young people. 

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