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Prevention tools and campaigns

As part of universal prevention, Children Action conceives and implements innovative participatory events, works on the development of awareness-raising tools and poster campaigns, and uses digital media to reach a wide audience.

Ado-Les-Sens 

Labyrinth

2021

An ephemeral interactive museum of 300 m2 on adolescence and the risk of suicide, set up in the open air.

Maquette 3D du Labyhinthe montrant en 3/4 du haut ouvert chaque partie.
Démonstration du livre physique qui a été imprimé pour les archives.

The exhibition book

Un des mur en bâche.

YouTube campaign

2020 - 2021

Children Action asked YouTubers to approach suicide in a different way, each with their own style.
 
​Carmine, Benjamin Friant, KiwiZzonk, and David Charles alias Mc Roger each had their own way of tackling the malaise of young people in a relevant and sensitive shift!

Fepalcon

1999 - 2000 - 2014

A youth suicide prevention campaign in the form of a pseudo-medicine box called Fepalcon was launched in Switzerland in 1999. The campaign was adopted by Belgium in 2000 and relaunched in Switzerland in 2014.

"Mal-A-Ta-Vie" exhibition

2017

Seven telephone booths designed by renowned artists, each with specific information on suicide were installed in the heart of Geneva.

Des cabines téléphoniques qui ont été placés devant le parc des bastions, Genève pour la prévention du suicide.
Des cabines téléphoniques qui ont été placés devant le parc des bastions, Genève pour la prévention du suicide.
Des cabines téléphoniques qui ont été placés devant le parc des bastions, Genève pour la prévention du suicide.
Zoom sur une cabine qui a été placés devant le parc des bastions, Genève pour la prévention du suicide.

Poster campaign: do not lose the number that can save those who have lost the will to live.

1996

No Suicide : a comic that breaks the taboo

1999

Teenage distress is not a movie 

2018

Dany Boon, Michel Boujenah and Catherine Deneuve took part in a new campaign to prevent teenage suicide. Presented in the form of cinema posters with the slogan "Teenage distress is not a movie", this campaign aimed to raise awareness among young people to take seriously words or gestures that signal their weariness with life.

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