Fr. 158.00

Hazardous Child Labour in Latin America

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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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.

List of contents

Note.- Preface.- Contributors.- Chapter 1 - Introduction: The Worst Forms of Child Labour in Latin America - G.K. Lieten.- Chapter 2 - Child Labour in an Urban Setting: Markets and Waste Collection in Lima - Anna Ensing.- Chapter 3 - The Risks of Becoming a Street Child: Working Children on the Streets of Lima and Cusco - Talinay Strehl.- Chapter 4 - Child Miners in Cajamarca, Peru - Marten van den Berge.- Chapter 5 - Stone Quarries in Guatemala - Luisa Moreno Ruiz.- Chapter 6 - Ore Mining in Bolivia - Laura Baas.- Chapter 7 - Mining at High Altitudes in Peru - Anna Ensing.- Chapter 8 - Children in Traditional and Commercial Agriculture - Marten van den Berge.- Chapter 9 - Coffee in Guatemala - Luisa Moreno Ruiz.- Chapter 10 - Children on Bolivian Sugar Cane Plantations - Laura Baas.- Chapter 11 - Concluding Remarks and Recommendations - G.K. Lieten.- Resources.

Summary

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.

Product details

Assisted by K Lieten (Editor), G K Lieten (Editor), G. K. Lieten (Editor), G.K. Lieten (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2014
 
EAN 9789400789999
ISBN 978-94-0-078999-9
No. of pages 230
Dimensions 155 mm x 235 mm x 13 mm
Weight 379 g
Illustrations XIV, 230 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > General
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Methods of empirical and qualitative social research

B, Ethics, Personal & public health, Social Sciences, Ethics & moral philosophy, Labour Economics, Quality of Life, Quality of Life Research, Moral Philosophy and Applied Ethics, Labor Economics, Labor and Population Economics, Maternal and child health services, Maternal and Child Health, Materno-fetal medicine

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