Child Labour
What is 'Child Labour'?
"Child Labour" is, generally speaking, work for children that harms
them or exploits them in some way (physically, mentally, morally, or
by blocking access to education).
There is no universally accepted definition of "child Labour". Varying
definitions of the term are used by international organisations, non-governmental
organisations, trade unions and other interest groups. Writers and speakers
don’t always specify what definition they are using, and that
often leads to confusion.
Not all work is bad for children. Some social scientists point out that
some kinds of work may be completely unobjectionable — except
for one thing about the work that makes it exploitative. For instance,
a child who delivers newspapers before school might actually benefit
from learning how to work, gaining responsibility, and earn a bit of
money. But what if the child is not paid? Then he or she is being exploited.
As Unicef’s 1997 State of the World’s Children Report puts
it, "Children’s work needs to be seen as happening along a continuum,
with destructive or exploitative work at one end and beneficial work
- promoting or enhancing children’s development without interfering
with their schooling, recreation and rest - at the other. And between
these two poles are vast areas of work that need not negatively affect
a child’s development." Other social scientists have slightly
different ways of drawing the line between acceptable and unacceptable
work.
Not all work is bad for children. Some social scientists point out that
some kinds of work may be completely unobjectionable — except
for one thing about the work that makes it exploitative. For instance,
a child who delivers newspapers before school might actually benefit
from learning how to work, gaining responsibility, and a bit of money.
But what if the child is not paid? Then he or she is being exploited.
As Unicef’s 1997 State of the World’s Children Report puts
it, "Children’s work needs to be seen as happening along a continuum,
with destructive or exploitative work at one end and beneficial work
- promoting or enhancing children’s development without interfering
with their schooling, recreation and rest - at the other. And between
these two poles are vast areas of work that need not negatively affect
a child’s development." Other social scientists have slightly
different ways of drawing the line between acceptable and unacceptable
work.
International conventions also define "child Labour" as activities such
as soldiering and prostitution. Not everyone agrees with this definition.
Some child workers themselves think that illegal work (such as prostitution)
should not be considered in the definition of "child Labour." The reason:
These child workers would like to be respected for their legal work,
because they feel they have no other choice but to work.
To avoid confusion, when writing or speaking about "child Labour," it’s
best to explain exactly what you mean by child Labour — or, if
someone else is speaking, ask for a definition. This website uses the
first definition cited in this section: "Child Labour" is work for children
under age 18 that in some way harms or exploits them (physically, mentally,
morally, or by blocking children from education).
Who is a 'child'?
International conventions define children as aged 18 and under.
Individual governments may define "child" according to different ages
or other criteria.
"Child" and "childhood" are also defined differently by different cultures.
A "child" is not necessarily delineated by a fixed age. Social scientists
point out that children’s abilities and maturities vary so much
that defining a child’s maturity by calendar age can be misleading.
Who are child labourers? And how many are
there?
In 2000, the ILO estimates, "246 million child workers aged 5 and
17 were involved in child Labour, of which 171 million were involved
in work that by its nature is hazardous to their safety, physical or
mental health, and moral development. Moreover, some 8.4 million children
were engaged in so-called 'unconditional' worst forms of child Labour,
which include forced and bonded Labour, the use of children in armed
conflict, trafficking in children and commercial sexual exploitation."
Unicef’s State of the World’s Children Report says only
that although the exact number is not known, it is surely in the hundreds
of millions.
Where
do child labourers live
61% in Asia, 32% in Africa, and 7% in Latin America, 1% in US, Canada,
Europe and other wealthy nations In Asia, 22% of the workforce is children.
In Latin America, 17% of the workforce is children. The proportion of
child Labourers varies a lot among countries and even regions inside
those countries.
"In Africa, one child in three is at work, and in Latin America, one
child in five works. In both these continents, only a tiny proportion
of child workers are involved in the formal sector and the vast majority
of work is for their families, in homes, in the fields or on the streets."
-- Unicef’s 1997 State of the World’s Children Report
What do child labourers do?
Work ranges from taking care of animals and planting and harvesting
food, to many kinds of small manufacturing (e.g. of bricks and cement),
auto repair, and making of footwear and textiles.
More boys than girls work outside their homes. But more girls work in
some jobs: for instance, as domestic maids. Being a maid in someone’s
house can be risky. Maids typically are cut off from friends and family,
and can easily be physically or sexually abused by their employers.
Note: Less than 5% of child Labourers make products for export to other
countries. Sources for this statistic include Unicef’s State of
the World’s Children Report 1997.
Why
should we care?
Many children in hazardous and dangerous jobs are in danger of injury,
even death.
Beyond compassion, consider who today’s children will become in
the future. Between today and the year 2020, the vast majority of new
workers, citizens and new consumers — whose skills and needs will
build the world’s economy and society — will come from developing
countries. Over that 20-year period, some 730 million people will join
the world’s workforce — more than all the people employed
in today's most developed nations in 2000. More than 90 percent of these
new workers will be from developing nations, according to research by
Population Action International. How many will have had to work at an
early age, destroying their health or hampering their education?
How can ordinary
people help reduce child labour?
Learn about the issue. Support organizations that are raising awareness,
and providing direct help to individual children.
How was child labour reduced in today’s
developed countries?
Four main changes took place:
1. Economic development that raised family incomes and living standards
2. Widespread, affordable, required and relevant education
3. Enforcement of anti-child Labour laws (along with compulsory education
laws)
4. Changes in public attitudes toward children that elevated the importance
of education
What are some misunderstandings about
child labour?
Unicef lists these "myths":
It is a myth that child Labour is only a problem in developing countries.
"But in fact, children routinely work in all industrialized countries,
and hazardous forms of child labour can be found in many countries.
In the US, for example, children are employed in agriculture, a high
proportion of them from immigrant or ethnic-minority families. A 1990
survey of Mexican-American children working in the farms of New York
state showed that almost half had worked in fields still wet with pesticides
and over a third had themselves been sprayed."
It is a myth that child Labour will only disappear when poverty disappears.
Hazardous Labour can, and should be eliminated by even the poorest countries.
It is a myth that most child Labourers work in sweatshops
making goods for export. "Soccer balls made by children in Pakistan
for use by children in industrialized countries may provide a compelling
symbol, but in fact, only a very small proportion of all child workers
are employed in export industries - probably less than 5 per cent. Most
of the world’s child labourers actually are to be found in the
informal sector - selling on the street, at work in agriculture or hidden
away in houses – far from the reach of official labour inspectors
and from media scrutiny."
It is a myth that "the only way to make headway against
child labour is for consumers and governments to apply pressure through
sanctions and boycotts.
While international commitment and pressure are important, boycotts
and other sweeping measures can only affect export sectors, which are
relatively small exploiters of child labour. Such measures are also
blunt instruments with long-term consequences that can actually harm
rather than help the children involved."
What causes child
labour today?
Poverty is widely considered the top reason why children
work at inappropriate jobs for their ages. But there are other reasons
as well:
• Family expectations and traditions.
• Abuse of the child.
• Lack of good schools and day care.
• Lack of other services, such as health care.
• Public opinion that downplays the risk of early work for children.
• Uncaring attitudes of employers
• Limited choices for women.
"The parents of child labourers are often unemployed or underemployed,
desperate for secure employment and income. Yet it is their children
- more powerless and paid less - who are offered the jobs. In other
words, says UNICEF, children are employed because they are easier to
exploit," according to the "Roots of Child Labour" in Unicef’s
1997 State of the World’s Children Report.
The report also says that international economic trends also have increased
child Labour in poor countries. "During the 1980s, in many developing
countries, government indebtedness, unwise internal economic policies
and recession resulted in economic crisis. Structural adjustment programmes
in many countries accentuated cuts in social spending that have hit
the poor disproportionately. " Although structural adjustment programs
are being revised to spare education from deep cuts, the report says,
some countries make such cuts anyway because of their own, local priorities.
In many countries public education has deteriorated so much, the report
declared, that education itself has become part of the problem —
because children work to avoid going to school.
Children do some types of low-status work, the report adds, because
children come from minority groups or populations that have long suffered
discrimination. " In northern Europe, for example, child labourers are
likely to be African or Turkish; in Argentina, many are Bolivian or
Paraguayan; in Thailand, many are from Myanmar. An increasingly consumer-oriented
culture, spurring the desire and expectation for consumer goods, can
also lead children into work and away from school."
What are sulotuons to child labour?
• Increased family incomes
• Education — that helps children learn skills that will
help them earn a living
• Social services — that help children and families survive
crises, such as disease, or loss of home and shelter
• Family control of fertility — so that families are not
burdened by children
The ILO’s International Programme for the Elimination of Child
Labour (IPEC) has explored many programs to help child Labourers. See
IPEC documents on the www.ilo.org site.
The 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child calls for children to
participate in important decisions that will affect their lives.
Some educators and social scientists believe that one of the most important
ways to help child workers is to ask their opinions, and involve them
in constructing "solutions" to their own problems.

(Source: http://www.childlaborphotoproject.org,
http://www.ilo.org,
http://www.childlabor.org
http://www.unicef.org)
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