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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
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Mengistu Abate Weldeyesus; Bamlaku Alamirew Alemu – International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy, 2024
Using a mixed research design, the overall objective of this study is to investigate the profiles of child labour in Ethiopia's districts of Raya-Kobo and Angot. The study's specific objectives are to examine types of activities and prevalence of child labour, to identify the children's working contexts, and to evaluate the extent of harm children…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Work Environment, Child Safety
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Brooke Wortsman; Jasodhara Bhattacharya; Joshua Lim; Fabrice Tanoh; Shamina Shaheen; Amy Ogan; Kaja Jasinska – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2024
Child labour disrupts education, but there is scant research on the reciprocal relationship: education disrupting child labour. We examined the link between school quality and child cocoa agricultural work in a sample of 2168 fifth-grade children from forty-one primary schools in rural Côte d'Ivoire. Children attending a higher quality school were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 5, Child Labor, Agriculture
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Kuépié, Mathias – Education Economics, 2018
In this paper, our main objective is to test the hypothesis that child labor can be a rational response to low returns to formal education in Mali. To this end, after a literature review, we build a flexible conceptual model that explicitly links the child labor supply to the comparison of the expected returns to education with child labor. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Outcomes of Education, Labor Market
Li, Tianshu; Sekhri, Sheetal – World Bank, 2020
Many developing countries use employment guarantee programs to combat poverty. This paper examines the consequences of such employment guarantee programs for the human capital accumulation of children. It exploits the phased roll-out of India's flagship Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGA) to study the effects on…
Descriptors: Employment, Poverty, Child Labor, Human Capital
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Keshavarz Haddad, GholamReza – Journal of Education and Work, 2017
In the framework of a household's collective decision processes, this study presents a structural empirical model to test the hypothesis that child labour is compelled by household's poverty and parent's bargaining power against one another. To this end, a measure for mother's intra-household bargaining power is developed. I use Iranian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Parents, Poverty
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Ahmed, Ahmed Y.; Miller, Vachel W.; Gebremeskel, Haftu H.; Ebessa, Asrat D. – Educational Studies, 2019
The rapid expansion of primary education in Ethiopia has enabled most children to attend primary education--or at least to start schooling. This expansion, however, is largely "symbolic" rather than "substantive" where "substantive" refers to access that generates meaningful learning. The article explores spatial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Sustainable Development, Equal Education
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Chakraborty, Suchita – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2016
Secondary education has been a relatively neglected area in India, both at the level of policy and research. Statistical data at the secondary level of education reveals a bleak picture in terms of enrolment and completion rates. This article explores the underlying reasons for the dismal scenario at the secondary level of education by situating…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Secondary Education, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries
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No, Fata; Sam, Chanphirun; Hirakawa, Yukiko – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2012
Previous studies on school dropout in Cambodia often used data from subjects after they already dropped out or statistics from education-related institutions. Using data from children in two rural provinces before they dropped out, this study examines four main factors in order to identify their influence on primary school dropout in Cambodia.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Dropouts, Foreign Countries, Child Labor
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Kondylis, Florence; Manacorda, Marco – Journal of Human Resources, 2012
Is improved school accessibility an effective policy tool for reducing child labor in developing countries? We address this question using microdata from rural Tanzania and a regression strategy that attempts to control for nonrandom location of households around schools as well as classical and nonclassical measurement error in self-reported…
Descriptors: Attendance, Evidence, Measurement, Foreign Countries
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Haile, Getinet; Haile, Beliyou – Education Economics, 2012
We examine work participation and schooling for children aged 7-15 using survey data from rural Ethiopia. Bivariate probit and age-adjusted educational attainment equations have been estimated. Male children are found to be more likely to attend school than their female counterparts. "Specialization" in child labour is also found, with…
Descriptors: Family Planning, Family Size, Educational Attainment, Foreign Countries
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Kis-Katos, Krisztina; Sparrow, Robert – Journal of Human Resources, 2011
We examine the effects of trade liberalization on child work in Indonesia, identifying geographical differences in the effects of trade policy through district level exposure to reduction in import tariff barriers, from 1993 to 2002. The results suggest that increased exposure to trade liberalization is associated with a decrease in child work…
Descriptors: Siblings, Economics, Child Labor, Rural Areas
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Beegle, Kathleen; Dehejia, Rajeev; Gatti, Roberta – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
Despite the extensive literature on the determinants of child labor, the evidence on the consequences of child labor on outcomes such as education, labor, and health is limited. We evaluate the causal effect of child labor participation among children in school on these outcomes using panel data from Vietnam and an instrumental variables strategy.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Rural Areas, Educational Attainment
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Webbink, Ellen; Smits, Jeroen; de Jong, Eelke – Social Indicators Research, 2013
We develop a new theoretical framework that explains the engagement in child labor of children in developing countries. This framework distinguishes three levels (household, district and nation) and three groups of explanatory variables: Resources, Structure and Culture. Each of the three groups refers to another strand of the literature;…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Anthropology, Rural Areas, Developing Nations
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Abebe, Tatek; Kjorholt, Anne Trine – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2009
This article explores the role of children in household livelihoods among the Gedeo ethnic community in Ethiopia. Three themes are discussed--reproductive activities, entrepreneurial work in marketplaces and sociospatial mobility--in the context of recent theoretical debates over children's agency and social competence. With shifts in rural…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Ethnic Groups, Rural Economics, Child Labor
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Shafiq, M. Najeeb – Education Economics, 2007
This study estimates the returns to boys' education for rural Bangladeshi households by accounting for some conventionally neglected items: direct costs of education, foregone child labour earnings, and option value. The estimated returns are 13.5% for primary education, 7.8% for junior-secondary education, 12.9% for higher-secondary education,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Costs, Males, Family (Sociological Unit)
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