Taking the Kids: To an All-Inclusive without Kids
- On Tuesday, the French government held a roundtable with industry leaders to address the rising trend of venues excluding children across France.
- This trend emerged as venues seek to shield customers from children's disruptive behavior, leading officials like Sarah El Hairy to condemn it for dividing society and infringing children's rights.
- Laurence Rossignol, a senator from the Socialist Party, has proposed legislation to prohibit venues in France from banning children, emphasizing that kids should be welcomed and that society must remain inclusive of all age groups.
- Estimates show adult-only services compose about three percent of the French market, while reports to President Macron and warnings from the HCFEA highlight children’s rights to space and noise for health and social inclusion.
- Officials warn of growing intolerance and urge parliamentary action to prevent pushing children and families out, viewing exclusion as societal harm that contradicts French cultural values.
86 Articles
86 Articles

Taking the kids: To an all-inclusive without kids
I get it now. I get why so many people keep returning to all-inclusive resorts and cruises.
Born in South Korea around 2011, the phenomenon of child-prohibited areas is becoming increasingly widespread and pronounced in Spain. This trend, which aims to preserve tranquillity, comfort or meet specific expectations of tourists, questions about the place reserved for children in Spanish society.
When you approach the holidays, you may be thinking about going solo for a few days. According to a recent poll, one in two Frenchmen would like to go on a weekend without his spouse from time to time. For or against? Benjamin Muller deciphers this practice in "Hello! Morning TF1". - Going on a weekend without his spouse: 1 Frenchman out of 4 has already done, why not you? (Topics of society).
'No Children' Holiday Venue? Think Again, Says France
The French government is mulling measures to clamp down on adult-only hotels and restaurants, with a top official warning that hospitality venues excluding children in a so-called "no kids" strategy were dividing society.

'No-kids' holiday venue? Think again, says France
The French government is mulling measures to clamp down on adult-only hotels and restaurants, with a top official warning that hospitality venues excluding children in a so-called "no kids" strategy were dividing society.
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