is child labour always wrong?

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IS CHILD LABOUR ALWAYS WRONG? Dr Dorte Thorsen, Gender and Qualitative Research Theme Leader Migrating out of Poverty Research Consortium, University of Sussex Photo: Dorte Thorsen Chatham House Forum, London, 20 July 2017

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IS CHILD LABOUR ALWAYS WRONG?Dr Dorte Thorsen,

Gender and Qualitative Research Theme LeaderMigrating out of Poverty Research Consortium, University of Sussex

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Chatham House Forum, London, 20 July 2017

CHILD LABOUR DEBATE

• Emotive & deeply moral

• Children as dependants

• free of responsibilities

• in school

• leisure time spent playing

European, middleclass childhood

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Photo: ChangeInSociety

Photo: Make Chocolate Fair UK

WHAT IS CHILD LABOUR?

• Paid work that deprives children of:

• their childhood

• their potential

• their dignity

• Work that is harmful to physical and mental development

But how can we assess these deprivations?

Photo: Dorte Thorsen

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FAD FOR STATS

CONTRASTING VIEWS

Abolition of child labour

• Universal labour standards banning child labour with the aim of preventing harm, exploitation and trafficking

• To increase participation in formal schooling (EFA/UPE)

CONTRASTING VIEWS

• Academic critiques rooted in child-centred research

• Children may need and choose to work because of social and economic rewards

• Labour standards to protect working children, not criminalise them

➢ Uncertain link between work and trafficking

➢ Challenging universalism - need to know more about the context of children’s lives

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RENEWED FOCUS ON CHILD LABOUR

• UK government focus on combatting modern slavery, trafficking and child labour

• Inclusion of minimum age standards for work (ILO Convention No. 138) in the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child

TROUBLES WITH THE ‘CHILD LABOUR’ LABEL

• Assumption that keeping children out of work up to a certain age will keep them safe and in school

• Minimum standards incorporated in legislation

➢ Younger children barred from formal employment and pushed into invisible and harmful work

➢ Older children may be exposed to exploitation and harm as legislation is tied to age not the work conditions

Photo: Jaaay Nguyen, Emaze

WORST FORMS OF CHILD LABOUR

• Instruments like the ILO Convention No. 182 designed to address exploitation and harm are useful

• But only if we understand the nature of the work children are doing

➢ Age-appropriate work

➢How labels are used locally

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CHILD LABOUR & CHILDREN’S POTENTIAL

• Causal link in child labour definition between paid work and deprivation of potential

• Ignores that

• Adolescents work to finance their own schooling or vocational training

• Adolescents learn through work – specific occupations and navigating the (informal) labour market

Photo: Dorte Thorsen

EFFECTIVE POLICIES

• Preventing the exploitation of working children best done through

➢ Enforcing children’s rights as workers

➢ Enforcing protection through the ILO Convention No. 182 but based on detailed knowledge about working conditions

• Enable education through

➢ Increasing quality of education

➢ Reducing formal and informal costs of schooling

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For further information

Dorte Thorsen, Email: [email protected]

Co-author of Child Migrants in Africa, Zed Books, 2011

Author of:

Weaving in and out of employment and self-employment: young rural migrants in the informal economy of Ouagadougou. International Development Planning Review, 2013.

Jeans, bicycles and mobile phones. Adolescent migrants' material consumption in Burkina Faso. In: Child and youth migration. Mobility-in-migration in an era of globalization Palgrave MacMillan, 2014.