COSTAGo to detailed state report RICA

In 2003, a survey by the Paniamor Foundation of 1,034 school children aged 9-16 years found that nearly half (47.8%) experienced physical punishment occasionally in the home, while 4.2% experienced it frequently, more so for boys than girls in both cases; 11% said they had been punished in the past 15 days. The reasons given for being punished were mainly concerned with correcting behaviour: "they behave badly" (71.5%), "they don't do as they are told" (22.7%), "to educate" (5.8%). Most punishment was administered by parents (mother 78%, father 77%), but was also given by grandparents (20%), older siblings (20%), uncles (19%), caregivers (16%), teachers (12%), domestic workers (9%), and the school principal (8%). When asked how they feel when they are punished, the most frequent responses were sadness (79.2%), pain (56.7%), fear (42.6%), guilt (39.8%) and loneliness (37.1%). The large majority of children viewed corporal punishment negatively, with almost two out of five children saying it is very bad and almost a third saying that people should not be punished in this way.

(Paniamor Foundation/Save the Children Sweden, 2004, "National Survey of Children and Adolescents on Physical Punishment", part of project "Prevencion de la Violencia desde la Familia y la Adolescencia", presented at Costa Rica, March 2004)
Further details on Children and research section