“…22 For a number of authors, it is the place of children, or specific groups of children, during conflict and its aftermath that provide the space in which children's place in the international system can best be analysed. 24 but it also includes work such as Carpenter's analyses of children born of wartime rape, 25 DeBerry's work on child soldiers and the UNCRC, 26 Hick's work on the political economy of war-affected children, 27 and Thompson's analysis of the citizenship issues surrounding children in Mozambique. 28 Notable too is the considerable body of work, from the 1950s and 1960s onwards, on how children acquire their political beliefs, either with regard to allegiance to a particular political party, to how they view political authority, or to the creation, or not, of nationalist feeling.…”