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In order to bridge the lack of information on child labour and to
stimulate policy interventions the IREWOC Foundation (International
Research on Working Children) has undertaken action-based research
in the field of the worst forms of child labour in Latin America.
In 2006 and 2007 a comparative study on the Worst Forms of Child
Labour was carried out in 7 different economic sectors in Bolivia,
Guatemala and Peru focussing on the hazardous worst forms. The
central research objectives were as follows: * to map the working
and living situations of children who are working in specific
economic sectors and what the consequences of this work are for
their physical and emotional wellbeing. * to investigate the
reasons why these children are working in these worst forms
sectors. The research results were expected to give important
insights into the currently polarised debate between those who
state child labour is above all related to cultural considerations
and those who state that economic reasons are fundamental to the
phenomena of child labour. * to map the existing policy initiatives
for child labourers in the worst forms and to identify the best
practices. In the face of challenges imposed by achieving the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set by the UN, specific
attention was paid to educational initiatives. Is education a
useful tool in combating child labour, and vice versa, is child
labour a significant obstacle to achieving universal primary
education? Although the evidence from the various cases discussed
in the book illustrate positive trends in terms of the worst forms
of child labor, thousands of children were still found to be
engaged in activities that form a direct threat to their physical,
mental and moral health and jeopardize their education. This book
proposes several practical recommendations for possible
interventions.
The child labour debate, the Child Rights Convention and the target
of universal primary education in the Millennium Development Goals
have drawn increasing attention to children in developing
countries. Alongside, a debate has waged on the need for child
participation and the appropriateness of spreading allegedly
western norms of childhood. This book aims to uncover the daily
life of children in selected areas in Vietnam, India, Burkina Faso,
Tanzania, Nicaragua and Bolivia against the background of those
debates. Children, Structure and Agency takes a close look at the
activities, the aspirations and the deliberations of hundreds of
poor children in the age category from 9 to 14, on the basis of a
dawn-to-sunset observation over a couple of days. By empowering
children to make people listen to them, children can play a more an
active role in their community. The book addresses the issue of
such child agency and the structural constraints to that agency.
This text would be of interest to child-centred development aid
organisations and scholars dealing with issues of child
participation, child rights, child labour and education.
The child labour debate, the Child Rights Convention and the target
of universal primary education in the Millennium Development Goals
have drawn increasing attention to children in developing
countries. Alongside, a debate has waged on the need for child
participation and the appropriateness of spreading allegedly
western norms of childhood. This book aims to uncover the daily
life of children in selected areas in Vietnam, India, Burkina Faso,
Tanzania, Nicaragua and Bolivia against the background of those
debates. Children, Structure and Agency takes a close look at the
activities, the aspirations and the deliberations of hundreds of
poor children in the age category from 9 to 14, on the basis of a
dawn-to-sunset observation over a couple of days. By empowering
children to make people listen to them, children can play a more an
active role in their community. The book addresses the issue of
such child agency and the structural constraints to that agency.
This text would be of interest to child-centred development aid
organisations and scholars dealing with issues of child
participation, child rights, child labour and education.
This volume describes how children's experience with violence may
affect and endanger their education, as well as their physical
safety and their general well-being. It includes all forms of
physical , psychological and sexual abuse, and neglect against
children at home, at school, and in public spaces in two different
areas of Kenya (rural and urban), while taking into account its
environmental and cultural factors. This volume is unique, not only
because of its focus on a less researched yet highly acute social
problem but also because it provides inside knowledge by giving the
children a voice through their direct participation in the data
collection.
This brief studies the phenomenon of street children in two cities
in Peru. It looks at some of the conceptual issues and, after
analysing why children are in the street and what behaviour and
which aspirations they exhibit, deals with the policy issues and
lessons to be learned. This brief investigates when and why the
transition from children on the street (street-working children) to
children of the street (street living children) takes place and
elucidates how they survive. It explains the fluidity and the risks
involved in any type of child street life.
In order to bridge the lack of information on child labour and to
stimulate policy interventions the IREWOC Foundation (International
Research on Working Children) has undertaken action-based research
in the field of the worst forms of child labour in Latin America.
In 2006 and 2007 a comparative study on the Worst Forms of Child
Labour was carried out in 7 different economic sectors in Bolivia,
Guatemala and Peru focussing on the hazardous worst forms. The
central research objectives were as follows: * to map the working
and living situations of children who are working in specific
economic sectors and what the consequences of this work are for
their physical and emotional wellbeing. * to investigate the
reasons why these children are working in these worst forms
sectors. The research results were expected to give important
insights into the currently polarised debate between those who
state child labour is above all related to cultural considerations
and those who state that economic reasons are fundamental to the
phenomena of child labour. * to map the existing policy initiatives
for child labourers in the worst forms and to identify the best
practices. In the face of challenges imposed by achieving the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set by the UN, specific
attention was paid to educational initiatives. Is education a
useful tool in combating child labour, and vice versa, is child
labour a significant obstacle to achieving universal primary
education? Although the evidence from the various cases discussed
in the book illustrate positive trends in terms of the worst forms
of child labor, thousands of children were still found to be
engaged in activities that form a direct threat to their physical,
mental and moral health and jeopardize their education. This book
proposes several practical recommendations for possible
interventions.
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