The Challenge of Child Labour in Asia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Challenge of Child Labour in Asia

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International adherence to the cause of human rights, including child rights ... UN Convention on the rights of the child. ILO Convention 138 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Challenge of Child Labour in Asia


1
The Challenge of Child Labour in Asia
  • Special Focus on the Philippines

2
Child labour has become an important social issue
in the international development agenda
3
This is due to
  • Greater awareness of the nature, extent and
    consequences of early child work
  • International adherence to the cause of human
    rights, including child rights
  • Powerful movements by consumers and manufacturers
    linking trade issues with international labour
    standards

4
Child work vs. child labour
  • Not all work done by children is child labour.
    Running errands or helping parents help children
    develop. Such tasks prepare children for
    adulthood and is a way of acquiring skills from
    one generation to the next.

5
Exploitative child work is ...
  • Hazardous, dangerous, under socially unjust
    conditions
  • Harmful to the childs health
  • Impairs the physical, mental and emotional
    development
  • Infringes the childs human rights
  • Separates children from their families

6
Causes of child labour supply factors
  • Poverty is the main push factor. Other factors
    are
  • Lack of educational facilities or poor quality of
    education
  • Disrupted family patterns
  • Entrenched social and cultural attitudes
  • Demographic factors

7
Causes of child labour demand factors
  • Children are docile and compliant workers and in
    most cases cost less
  • Children can be hired, dismissed and re-hired
    easily.
  • Misplaced perception of the necessity of
    children in certain production tasks

8
Global estimate of child labour
  • A conservative estimate of the ILO concludes that
    there are about 250 million working children
    world-wide.
  • Nearly half work full-time.

9
Child labour by region
Asia has most of the child workers (61) while
Africa has the highest incidence at 40
Asia (61)
Africa (32)
10
Child labour in Asia
  • Asia has shown dramatic economic performance
    yet, child labour remains a serious problem
  • Also, extreme forms of child labour (bonded child
    labour, child prostitution, and the traffic of
    children) exist in the region.

11
Profile of the working children in Asia
  • More likely to work in rural than urban areas
  • Majority found in small production units, few are
    found in the modern sector
  • About equal number of working boys and girls

12
Economic growth by itself is not a cure-all ...
  • Disparities across regions and sectors
    (rural-urban migration, widening of the income
    inequalities, increased demand in certain
    economic sectors..)
  • Intensity of child labour untilization

13
Structural changes in child labour seen in SEA
  • Urbanization of child labour
  • Structural shift from primary to secondary and
    tertiary sectors
  • Proportion of wage child labour has increased,
    unpaid family work has declined

14
The International Labour Organization
  • ILO was formed in 1919 as part of the League of
    Nations. The organization precedes the United
    Nations by twenty five years.

15
ILOs Objectives
  • Promotion of social justice
  • Improvement of living and working conditions

16
ILOs Core Mandates
  • International Standard Setting through
    Conventions and Recommendations
  • Technical Advisory Services through
    multi-disciplinary teams
  • Technical cooperation through assistance
    programmes for its tripartite partners

17
The Structure
  • ILO works through a Tri-partite Structure of
    government, workers and employers
    organizations.

18
The International Programme on the Elimination of
Child Labour
  • Started in 1992 with 6 participating countries,
    IPEC is now operational in 31 countries. It has
    become one of ILOs largest technical cooperation
    programmes

19
IPEC A global movement
  • 1992 Brazil, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Thailand,
    Turkey
  • 1994 Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines,
    Tanzania
  • 1996/97 Argentina, Benin, Bolivia, Cambodia,
    Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic,
    Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Guatemala,
    Honduras, Panama, Peru, Madagascar, Nicaragua,
    Venezuela, Senegal and Sri Lanka

20
The aims of IPEC
  • The progressive elimination of child labour by
  • creating a world-wide movement
  • strengthening national capacities

21
IPECs priority target groups
  • Children working under forced labour conditions
  • Children in hazardous working conditions
  • Very young children
  • Working girls

22
IPECs Principle
  • Child labour is a national responsibility. It is
    therefore first and foremost the responsibility
    of national governments and civil society.

23
IPEC in the Philippines
  • ILO and the Philippine government signed a
    Memorandum of Understanding in June 1994. This
    agreement has been extended till Year 2001.

24
The Working Children of the Philippines
  • 3.6 million Filipino children between the ages of
    5-17 work. This is 15.9 of the child
    population, or put more simply, one out of six
    children are economically active.

25
Age profile
  • 216,000 between the ages of 5-9
  • 1.6 million between the ages of 10-14
  • 1.8 million are between the ages of 15-17

26
Socio-demographic profile
  • More rural than urban
  • 11.5 of all urban children 20.7 of all rural
    children
  • More boys than girls 11.7 of all girls work
    20.8 of the boys

27
The regional profile
  • Regions 4, 6, 11 have the highest numbers of
    working children
  • Regions 2, 12 and 11 have the highest incidence.

28
Workplaces
  • 63.2 in farms
  • 17.5 in own homes
  • 9.8 in their employers or another persons
    household
  • 7.7 in the market places and the streets
  • 2.2 in mines and quarries

29
Exposure to Hazards
  • 2.2 million children or 60 are in hazardous work
    situations, consisting of physical difficulties
    and chemical exposures.
  • 30 are in permanent work

30
80 experience work related difficulties
  • exhaustion (63.3)
  • stress (55), physical burden (47)
  • boredom (52)
  • 8 have no day off
  • 17 consider their work as risky dangerous.

31
Suffer injuries and illnesses from work
  • 24 or 869,199 working children have experienced
    at least one work-related injury or illness.
    These range from cuts and wounds, abrasions to
    illness requiring hospital care.

32
Studying?
  • 70 of working children combine school and work.
    600,000 no longer attend school.
  • Those who continue school face many difficulties
  • low grades (41.2)
  • absenteeism (25.3), tardiness (26)
  • Many tend to be chronic drop-outs.

33
Live and work away from home
  • Of 409,849 children are living away from home,
    75 work.
  • The working children away from home are mostly
    girls, come from rural households and work in
    urban sectors a large number work in households.

34
Philippine priority groups of children
  • Four (4) primary target groups of children
  • victims of trafficking
  • children in mining/quarrying
  • children in home-based work esp. under
    sub-contracting
  • children in prostitution

35
The secondary groups are
  • Children in domestic service
  • Children in the pyrotechnics industry
  • Children in muro-ami/deep-sea fishing
  • Children in vegetable and sugar production

36
Areas of Action
  • Situation analysis
  • National policy
  • Intl labour standards
  • Advocacy
  • Social mobilization
  • Direct services preventive, protective,
    rehabilitative
  • Capability building

37
Situation Analysis
  • National surveys
  • Dedicated surveys
  • Special investigative techniques
  • Outreach services

38
International standards
  • UN Convention on the rights of the child
  • ILO Convention 138
  • ILO conventions on forced labour, night work,
    etc.
  • Proposed convention on intolerable forms of work

39
Law enforcement
  • National law and regulations
  • Operational guidelines regarding hazardous work
  • Action against deceptive recruitment and
    trafficking
  • Increased priority of labor inspection in
    informal work arrangements

40
Priority-setting
  • Formulation of the Indicative Framework for
    action giving greater emphasis on priority target
    groups of children

41
Advocacy
  • Challenging the myths
  • Lobbying
  • Strategic alliances and coalitions
  • National media campaigns

42
Social mobilization
  • Directed for and with the child
  • Family protection
  • Employer responsibility
  • Community Involvement
  • Inter-sectoral action

43
A Diverse Range of Partnerships
  • Government
  • Departments of Labor Employment, Justice,
    Social Welfare Devt., Interior Local
    Government Council for the Welfare of Children,
    Phil. Information Agency
  • Employers
  • Employers Confederation of the Phils.
  • Bishop Businessmens Conference

44
Partnerships
  • Trade Unions
  • Trade Union Congress of the Phils., Federation of
    Free Workers, International Textile Garment
    Leather
  • NGOs
  • Visayan Forum, Stop Trafficking of Pilipinos,
    Ateneo Human Rights Center, Childhope Asia,
    Philippine Childrens Television, etc.

45
Focus on education
  • Scholarships
  • Alternative learning (NFE)
  • Special classes and flexible schedules
  • Vocational training

46
Direct services to child workers
  • Access to education
  • Welfare and recreational services
  • Health monitoring
  • Psycho-social counseling, emotional support

47
Direct services to child workers ...
  • Legal assistance
  • Alternative income and livelihood
  • Organizing and empowerment initiatives

48
Focus on employer action
  • Awareness raising and advocacy
  • Representation in tripartite bodies
  • Company codes of conduct on hiring and
    procurement
  • Corporate outreach programmes
  • Sectoral initiatives

49
Capacity Building
  • Specialized training (psycho-social counseling,
    paralegal education)
  • Networking and collaborative action
  • International solidarity

50
Strategic priorities for the future
  • Early stage Laying the groundwork. The 100
    flowers bloom approach using a diverse
    innovative experiments.
  • Second more mature stage comprehensive,
    self-sustaining programmes

51
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