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This book interrogates the international child protection regime,
with a particular focus on its weaknesses and failures. It looks at
the lack of accountability, the normativity, and the tendency to
recreate patterns of power and exclusion that blight otherwise good
intentions. The book assesses why the regime falls short of its
ideals and offers ideas for what can be done to improve it.
Bringing together influential, established voices, and emerging
scholars who work on issues related to childhood, youth, policy,
and practice, the book offers a timely intervention that aims to
push the world of international child protection in more
progressive directions.
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
Millions of children throughout Africa undertake many forms of farm
and domestic work. Some of this work is for wages, some is on their
family's own small plots and some is forced and/or harmful. This
book examines children's involvement in such work. It argues that
framing all children's engagement in economic activity as 'child
labour', with all the associated negative connotations, is
problematic. This is particularly the case in Africa where many
rural children must work to survive and where, the contributors
argue, much of the work undertaken is not harmful. The conceptual
and case-based chapters reframe the debate about children's work
and harm in rural Africa with the aim of shifting research, public
discourse and policy so that they better serve the interest of
rural children and their families.
This book provides the first overarching, empirically grounded,
critical analysis of child trafficking as an idea, ordering
principle, and artefact of politics. It examines (once) hegemonic
anti-child trafficking discourse, policy and practice, and does so
by placing secondary literature from around the world in
conversation the author's paradigmatic case study of the situation
in southern Benin. It deconstructs the child trafficking paradigm,
contrasts it with 'real' histories of child and youth labour and
mobility, and seeks to explain it by going 'inside' the
anti-trafficking field. In doing so, Howard tells a gripping story
of ideology at work.
This book provides the first overarching, empirically grounded,
critical analysis of child trafficking as an idea, ordering
principle, and artefact of politics. It examines (once) hegemonic
anti-child trafficking discourse, policy and practice, and does so
by placing secondary literature from around the world in
conversation the author's paradigmatic case study of the situation
in southern Benin. It deconstructs the child trafficking paradigm,
contrasts it with 'real' histories of child and youth labour and
mobility, and seeks to explain it by going 'inside' the
anti-trafficking field. In doing so, Howard tells a gripping story
of ideology at work.
BLOODY MAMA BLUES captures the war behind the war in Vietnam.
Corruption, black market dealings, prostitution, drugs, and easy
money proved seductive to countless American soldiers. Lieutenant
Mike Hardy expects to serve an honorable tour of duty as an
infantry officer. Instead, he is thrown into a cauldron of evil.
BLOODY MAMA BLUES explores the underside of the Vietnam experience,
and the irreparable damage suffered by a generation of young men
and women.
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