What's most important is that the GDRs framework lays out a straightforward
operationalization of the UN's official differentiation principles, and that it does so in a way that protects the
poor from the burdens of climate mobilization.
The present article focuses upon two key problems in the
operationalization of the monitoring construct to date: (a)
poor conceptual specificity in parenting constructs such as monitoring, overprotection, and over-involvement when used to date among youth with chronic conditions and (b) the confounding of existing measures of parental monitoring with items evaluating parental knowledge of youth activities, which has resulted in a lack of data regarding the mechanisms by which parents obtain their information.